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THE  1918  PEAN 

Published  by  The  Pean  Board,  Phillips  Exeter  Academy 
Exeter,  New  Hampshire 

Editor-in-Chief J.  J.  Sack 

Managing  Editor      C.  H.  Huddleston 

Art  Editor D.  R.  Martin 

Secretary W.  S.  Howland 

Associate  Editors      B.  F.  Tolles 

C.  B.  P.  Cobb 
J.  H.  Terry 

Photographs  by  The  Cunningham  Studio,  Exeter,  N.  H. 
Engravings  by  The  Electric  City  Engraving  Co.,  Buffalo,  N.  Y 
Printed  by  The  News-Letter  Press,  Exeter,  N.  H. 
Bound  by  The  Bo.xton  Bookbinding  Co.,  Cambridge,  Mass. 


-fporetoorti 


greetings 


an 


ourse  another  scljool 
b  sacrifice,  of  jap,  anb 
t  butp  of  perpetuating 
i  fjifitorp  of  Cxeter. 
Pean,  a  Pean  tohicf) 
probe  in  tfje  coming 
ipon  former  bolumes. 
tn  abopteb.    We  hope 

best  to  us  maj>  be 
ts  i)abe  been  birecteb 
rb    of  a  momentous 

tfjougfj  untoortfjp  of 
ijope  map  at  least  be 
noton  future,  breams 
[j»s   tolucf)   ar?  gone. 


"Mtl,ti""  .ii.Ma-ii«jn»iiii....    jtTapCTJ 


Egatn  to  our  ^eto  <£nglanb  countrpSibe 

3n  itss  eternal  freSbneSS  come*  tfje  spring : 

Ct)E  robing  pipe,  t\yt  blacfebirbs  foraging 
abobe  tbe  neto=turneb  Eartb  range  far  anb  tuibe ; 
25ut  like  belateti  toinbei  of  mintertibe 

<3Tbat  tlasit  tbe  tenber  blabe's  abbenturing, 

labile  icp  betobrops  to  tbe  tulips  cling, 
OBrabe  tbougbts  of  Jfrance  our  mounting  Spirits  ctjibc. 

get  tooulb  our  labs  upon  tbat  foreign  Sbore 
^ot  babe  us  numb  our  bearts  toitb  futile  fears 
HeSt  tbep  Sboulb  fall  or  tijetr  bigb  cause  sboulb  fail ; 
25ut  bear,  as  tbep,  amibst  tbe  battle  roar, 
immortal  as  tbe  music  of  tbe  spberes, 
^till  Singing  on  uncbecfeeb,  tf)c  nigbtingale. 

-3.  P- 


TO  THOSE 
EXONIANS 
WHO  HAVE 
DEDICATED 

Tf       T    ■■■■    i  '  1       T     | %   .  ' 
nolrv 


TO  THE 
GREAT  CAVSE 


ff  ^k 


llp<^ 


Jn  ^emoriam 


^©agno  2?ello  ©ttam 

©el  Pro  3Uequitate  ©el  Pro  Patria 

Profubcrunt 


FLORENCE  JOHN  PRICE,  '01 

HENRY  AUGUSTUS  BUTTERS,  JR.L 

HENRY  MONTGOMERY  SUCKLEYj  ' 

HENRJraS^N  GRIEB,  '1° 

OLIVEi 

EZRA 

STEP 


"<©ut  of  tfje  strain  of  tfje  botng, 
3nto  ti)e  peace  of  tfje  bone." 


jailitarp  i|onor£ 


EDWARD 

JAMES  RO 
of  H 

NORMAN 

HENRY  M 

JOHN  HAIV 

BROWNL 

EDWIN  CH| 
'Frerch 

SUMMERFU 

• 
CHARLES  |0 

ARTHUR lk 

JAMES  MQRI 

HERBERT 


,  Officer  of  the  Legion  of  Honor 

f  the  Legion 


uerre 


ghest  class 


atlle  Militaire 


41  Cbere  solbiers  Slune,  there  scfjularg  toalk, 
©ark  heroes  plough  the  nabieb  sea ; 

Bub  arms  anb  letters  interlock, 
<3Eo  make  our  golben  fnstorp." 


@ 


NEW  EXETER 
THE  SCHOOL 
ORGANIZATIONS 
MILITARY 
ATHLETICS 
THE  PEAL 


n 


THE  1918  PEAN 


Class  of  1917  Flagpole 


m 


11 


Thompson  Gymnasium  and  Swimming  Pool 


Old  Gymnasium 


Old  and  Netu  Exeter 

(First  and  Fourth  Academy  Buildings,  from  the  Robinson  Seminary) 


First  Academy  Building 


Netu  Academy  Building,  from  the  Baptist  Church  Steeple 


Second  Academy  Building 


Yard  Dormitories,  from  the  Academy  Totuer 


Third  Academy  Building 


Plimpton  Playing  Fields 


°'y^'P^M  "  ***** 

Entrance  to  Playing  Fields 


il 


i 


VRaOUQLi  THE  jfollBERAU'VY  OF 

ra-iriGiikoVruiiOL/vss  of  \u.i 

WHO    Dfl*I2  OCVOUL-R  £  15  OJ? 
VKIS  EUrLDIKO  V/US   ERECTED 


fc 


fm 


PEAM 


TIM" 


Dunbar  Hall 


Dunbar  Hall  Entrance 


PEAI 


Alumni  Hall 


-N-V 


Science  Laboratories 


4 


Hoyt  Hall 


1 1  a  ill  a  ii 


mf 


Principal's  Residence 


Academy  Clock  and  Bell  Tower 


Edtuard  Oilman  House 


Veazey  House 


If 


1916       1919       1920      1921 


JK 


4fc 


Sandford  Sidney  Smith,  A.B.,  LL.B.,  President New  York,  N.  V. 

Elected  June,  1893 

Lewis  Perry,  A.M.,  Litt.D.,  ex-officio Exeter,  N.  H. 

Elected  June,  1914 

William  Amos  Bancroft,  A.B Cambridge,  Mass. 

Elected  June,  1902 

George  Arthur  Plimpton,  A.B.,  LL.D New  York,  N.  Y. 

Elected  June,  1903 

Rodert  Winsor,  A.B Weston,  Mass. 

•   Elected  June,  1905 

Jeremiah  Smith,  Jr.,  A.B.,  LL.B Cambridge,  Mass. 

Elected  June,  1907 

Thomas  William  Lamont,  A.B Englewood,  N.  J. 

Elected  October,  1917 

Finance  Committee 
S.  S.  Smith  G.  A.  Plimpton  R.  Winsor 

Treasurer 

Francis  Wilson  Lee Boston,  Mass. 

Elected  July,  1895 

Cashier 

Emilie  S.  Spring Exeter,  N.  H. 

Elected  June  1896 

Clerk  of  the  Trustees 

Rev.  Samuel  H.  Dana,  A.B.,  D.D Exeter,  N.  H. 

Elected  October,  1916 


31 


3to  JPemonam 


DR.  WILLIAM  DcWITT  HYDE,  '75 

1858-1917 
President  of  Bowdoin  College,  Trustee  of  Phillips  Exeter  Academy,   1898-1917 


31n  Ins  fameb  fresco,  tjeabenlj>  ftapljael 

'Ctoo  masters  of  tfje  JSOtljenian  j>cf)ool  portrapeb, 

Jn  attttubc  upon  tije  esplnttabe, 
Mi  eaclj  t)is  ouni  peculiar  trtitfj  tuoulb  tell : 
©nc  Voitfj  fjis  arm  outstrctcfjeb  o'er  earth  luoulb  spell 

'JUSib  men  anb  Nature's  latus  tlje  golben  mean ; 

'Cfje  otljer  pointing  up  to  toorlbs  unseen 
B&oulb  Sljetu  toljere  ultimate  perfections  btoell. 

2?ut  tljou  life's  mpsterp  bibst  tfjuS  translate  : 

IDeilcb  'ueatlj  our  tuorlb  of  morbabap  Still  Stanbs 
'Cfje  informing  Spirit,  toitf)  unflagging  jeal 
J^triuing  to  sljape  in  our  imperfect  Jjtate 
JProm  patterns  of  the  tilings  not  mabe  roitlj  Ijanbs 
^fje  IttruS  23eata  of  tlje  common  toeal. 


%  P. 


32 


3n  jflBemortam 


STEPHEN  POTTER,  '15 

Killed  in  battle,  April  25,    1918,  in  the  service  of  his  country 


iFar  from  tlje  reaches  of  our  straining  epe 
'SEhe  abbenturing  eagle  on  his  journep  Soars, 
DBJjetlier  ttjc  bursting  tempest  toilblp  roars, 

<©r  clear  as  some  stueet  sounbing  bell,  the  skp. 
'B0here,"  ask  roe  bainlp,  "boes  tfjnt  trabeller  tip? 
BMl  he  alight  upon  Some  fairer  shores  ? 
<©r,  tohile  black  heaben  in  torath  its  furp  pours, 

Struck  hp  some  luckless  bolt,  inglorious  bie?" 

^o,  roith  a  Sea  abobe,  a  sea  heloto, 
©ibst  thou  take  taring  into  the  infinite — 
J^o  compass  of  this  mortal  roorlb  thp  neeb  ; 
His  on  the  uncharteb  course  roe  map  not  knoto, 
<d)ou  lost  tfjpself  foreber  from  our  sight, 
J3L  proben  eaglet  taiorthp  of  thp  breeb. 


%  P.  W. 


33 


suww 


AW^'ll 


J-W^ 


1917. 
Sept.  18,  Tuesday, 
Sept.  19,  Wednesday, 
Oct.  20,  Saturday, 
Nov.  29,  Thursday, 
Dec.  18,  Tuesday, 
Dec.  19,  Wednesday, 


Examinations  for  Admission. 
Fall  term  begins. 
Meeting  of  the  Trustees. 
Thanksgiving  Day:  a  holiday. 
Meeting  of  the  Trustees. 
Fall  term  ends. 


Winter  Vacation  of  Three  Weeks. 


1918. 
Jan.  9,  Wednesday, 
Feb.  22,  Friday, 
Feb.  25,  Monday, 
April  2,  Tuesday, 


Winter  term  begins. 
Washington's  Birthday:  a  holiday. 
Meeting  of  the  Trustees. 
Winter  term  ends. 


Spring  Vacation  of  One  Week 


April  8,  Monday. 
April  10,  Wednesday, 
April  20,  Saturday, 
June  14,  Friday, 
June  22,  Saturday, 

June  23,  Sunday. 
June  24,  Monday. 


June  25,  Tuesday, 


Meeting  of  the  Trustees. 
Spring  term  begins. 
Meeting  of  the  Trustees. 
Examinations  for  Admission. 
Speaking  for  the  Merrill  Prizes. 
Anniversary  Sermon. 
Meeting  of  the  Trustees. 
Seniors'  Class  Day. 
Alumni  Luncheon. 
Award  of  Diplomas  and  Prizes. 
Spring  term  ends. 


Summer  Vacation  of  Twelve  Weeks. 


Sept.   17,  Tuesday, 
Sep!.  18,  Wednesday, 
Oct.  14,  Monday, 
Nov.  28,  Thursday. 
Dec.  17,  Tuesday, 
Dec.  18,  Wednesday, 


Examinations  for  Admission. 
Fall  term  begins. 
Meeting  of  the  Trustees. 
Thanksgiving  Day:  a  holiday. 
Meeting  of  the  Trustees. 
Fall  term  ends. 


34 


j9BSSVflB£'«1 


Lewis  Perry,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Litt.D. 

Principal.     Harlan  P.  Amen  Professor.     Elected  June,  1914. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Lawrenceville  School.  A.B.,  Williams, 
1898;  A.M.,  Princeton,  1899;  A.M.,  Yale,  1916;  Litt.  Doc,  Dart- 
mouth, 1915;  A  A  * 

Instructor  at  Lawrenceville  School;  Professor  at  Williams  College. 
A  A  <i>  Club,  New  York;  Williams  Club,  New  York;  Tavern  Club, 
Boston.  Editor  Marlowe's  "Dr.  Faustus;"  Newspaper  and  maga- 
zine articles. 


James  Arthur  Tufts,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Secretary  of  the  Faculty  and  Professor  of  English  Literature. 
Elected  October,  1878. 

Prepared  for  college  at  the  Phillips  Exeter  Academy.  A.B., 
Harvard;  A.M.,  Dartmouth  (Hon.).  Everett  Athenaeum,  the 
Signet. 

Member  of  Modern  Language  Association  of  America,  American 
Dialect  Society,  American  Philological  Association,  New  England 
Association  of  Colleges  and  Secondary  Schools,  New  England 
Association  of  English  Teachers.  Editor  of  Scott's  "Lady  of  the 
Lake,"  Macaulay's  Essays  on  Milton  and  Addison,  Goldsmith's 
"Vicar  of  Wakefield"  and  "The  Deserted  Village." 


35 


Elected  September,  1887. 
High  School.     A.B.,  A.M., 


William  Allen  Francis,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Wentworth  Professor  of  Mathematics. 

Prepared  for  college  at   Fall   River 
Brown  University;  A  Y,  <J>   (3  K 

Instructor  at  Rutland,  Mass.,  High  School;  Concord,  Mass., 
High  School.  Member  of  Association  of  Teachers  of  Mathematics  in 
New  England.    Chairman,  Committee  of  Safety,  Exeter. 


Joseph  Sherman  Ford.  A.B.,  A.M. 

Assistant  to  the  Principal.    Appointed  June,  1894. 

Prepared  for  college  at  private  school  in  Waltham,  Mass.  A.B., 
Harvard,  1894;   A.M.,  Harvard,  1900. 

Member  of  New  England  Modern  Language  Association;  Har- 
vard Club  of  Boston;  Harvard  Club  of  New  York.  Formerly  joint 
editor  of  the  Bulletin  of  the  Phillips  Exeter  Academy.  Contribu- 
tions to  magazines. 


George  Benjamin  Rogers,  A.B.,  A.M. 
Instructor  in  German.    Appointed  June 


1895. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Albion,  N.  Y.,  High  School.  A.B.,  Will- 
iams, 1888;  A.M.,  Harvard,  1894;  Leipzig;  Halle;  Columbia. 
<|>  B  K 

Instructor  at  Riverview  Academy.  Member  of  American  Phil- 
ological Association,  New  England  Association  of  Colleges  and  Sec- 
ondary Schools,  New  England  Modern  Language  Association. 
Author  of  "Introduction  to  Latin"  (with  J.  C.  Ivirtland). 


Appointed  June,  1895. 
High   School.      A.B., 


Howard  Andrew  Ross,  A.B. 

Director  of  the  Gymnasium  and  of  Athletics. 

Prepared    for   college   at   Biddeford,    Me. 
Bowdoin.  A  A  <j> 

Formerly  Director  of  Manchester  Gymnasium.  Member  of 
American  Physical  Education  Association,  Secondary  School 
Directors'  Association. 


36 


George  Henry  Selleck,  A.B. 

Recorder.  Instructor  in  Mathematics.  Appointed  October,  1S96. 
Prepared  for  college  at  Glens  Falls  Academy,  N.Y.  A. B.,  Williams. 
Instructor  at  the  Hamilton  School,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 


John  Copeland  Kirtland,  A.B.,  A.M.,  L.H.D. 

Morison  Professor  of  Latin.    Elected  October,  1897. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Trumansburg  Academy,  New  York. 
A.B.,  Hobart  College,  1890;  A.M.,  1893;  L.H.D.,  1915;  Leland 
Stanford  Junior  University.    <|>  K  M>,  <)>  B  K 

Instructor  at  Washington  College,  Tacoma,  Wash.;  Manzanita 
Hall,  Palo  Alto,  Cal.;  Leland  Stanford  Junior  University;  Hobart 
College.  Member  of  Classical  Association  of  England  and  Wales, 
Classical  Association  of  New  England,  American  Philological 
Association,  National  Education  Association,  New  England  Asso- 
ciation of  Colleges  and  Preparatory  Schools,  National  Institute  of 
Social  Sciences.  Author  of  "  Selectionsjfrom  the  Correspondence  of 
Cicero. "    Editor  of  American  edition  of  Ritchie's  "Fabula?  Faciles," 

"Introduction  to  Latin"  (with  G.  B.  Rogers),  "Orations  of  Cicero" 

(with  A.  Harkness  and  G.  A.  Williams).     Editor-in-chief  of  Mac- 

millan's  Latin  Series. 

Winthrop  Edwards  Fiske,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  Physics.    Appointed  October,  1899. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Lowell  High  School,  Lowell,  Mass.  A.B., 
A.M.,  Harvard.    A  Y 

Instructor  at  Racine  College  Grammar  School,  Racine,  Wis. 
Member  of  Eastern  Association  of  Physics  Teachers. 


Arthur  Gordner  Leacock,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D. 

Professor  of  Greek.    Elected  October.  1899. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Norwich,  N.  Y.  A.B.,  Harvard  Univer- 
sity, 1893;   A.M.,  1894;   Ph.D.,  1899.    AY,     <{>BK 

Instructor  at  Wesleyan  Academy,  Massachusetts;  Wesleyan 
University,  Middletown,  Conn.  Member  of  Harvard  Club  of 
Boston,  American  Philological  Society,  Classical  Association  of  New 
England.  Author  of  "Studies  in  the  Life  of  St.  Paul;"  Doctor's 
Thesis,  in  Harvard  Studies. 


37 


Wilhelm  Segerblom,  A.B. 

Instructor  in  Chemistry.    Appointed  June,  1900. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Phillips  Exeter  Academy.  A.B.,  Harvard, 
1897. 

Member  of  American  Chemical  Society,  New  England  Associa- 
tion of  Chemistry  Teachers,  New  England  Association  of  Alumni  of 
Phillips  Exeter  Academy.  Author  of  "First  Year  Chemistry," 
"Qualitative  Analysis,"  "Tables  of  Properties,"  numerous  pam- 
phlets, articles  in  scientific  publications. 


Charles  Herbert  Clark,  A.B.,  A.M.,  D.Sc. 

Instructor  in  Latin.    Appointed  July,  1901. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Bangor  High  School  Bangor,  Me.  A.B., 
A.M.,  D.Sc,  Bowdoin.  Graduate  Student  Berlin  and  Paris.  0  A  x 
<|>  B  K 

Sometime  Fellow  of  Royal  Miscroscopical  Society,  London. 
Author  of  "Practical  Methods  in  Microscopy"  and  "Laboratory 
Manual  in  Practical  Botany." 


Stillman  Percy  Roberts  Chadwick,  A.B.,  A.M. 


Instructor  in  History.    Appointed  August,  1902. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Boston  Latin  School.  A.B. ,  A.M.,  Harvard. 
AY 

Instructor  at  Brewster  Free  Academy,  Wolfeboro,  N.  H.  Mem- 
ber of  American  Historical  Association,  New  England  History 
Teachers'  Association,  Ossipee  Club.  Author  of  revision  of  Good- 
speed's  "History  of  the  Ancient  World"  (with  Prof.  W.  S.  Ferguson) 
and  "An  Outline  of  Greek  and  Roman  History." 


Laurence  Murray  Crosbie,  A.B. 

Instructor  in  English.    Appointed  October,  1903. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Phillips  Exeter  Academy.  A.B.,  Harvard 
1904.     Signet. 

Member  of  the  New  England  Association  of  Teachers  of  English. 
Newspaper  and  magazine  articles.  Casual  correspondent  for  various 
newspapers;   contributed  to  magazines. 


38 


Daniel  Downs  Chase,  A.B. 

Instructor  in  Mathematics  and  Mechanical  Drawing.     Appointed 
December,  1903. 
Prepared  for  college  at  Portland,  Me.,  High  School.     A.B.,  Har- 
vard, 1903. 


James  Plaisted  Webber,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  English.    Appointed  February,  1905. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Bath,  Me.,  High  School.  A.B.,  Bowdoin, 
1900;  A.M.   Columbia,  1904.    National  A  A  <|> 

Instructor  at  High  School,  Bath,  Me.;  High  School,  Salem, 
Mass.;  Nautical  Preparatory  School;  New  York  Conservatory  of 
Dramatic  Art.  Author  of  "Repetitions."  Contributions  to  Youth's 
Companion,  The  Etude,  The  Musician. 


Norman  Shaw  McKendrick,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  History.    Appointed  June,  1900. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Brockton,  Mass.,  High  School,  Bridge- 
water,  Mass.,  Normal  School.     A.B.,  Harvard,  1904;   A.M.,  1905. 

Instructor  in  Massachusetts  public  schools;  Assistant  in  History, 
Harvard  College  and  Radcliffe  College.  Member  of  American 
Historical  Association,  American  Political  Science  Association, 
American  Association  for  Labor  Legislation,  New  England  History 
Teachers'  Association,  New  England  Association  of  Colleges  and 
Secondary  Schools,  National  Voter's  League,  National  Security 
League,  National  Short  Ballot  Association.  Collaborated  with 
Prof.  William  Stearns  Davis,  PhD.,  in  his  "History  of  Mediaeval 
and  Modern  Europe." 


Frank  William  Cushwa,  A.B.,  A.M. 


Odlin  Professor  of  English.    Elected  February,  1907. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Martinsburg,  W.  Va.,  High  School.  A.B., 
West  Virginia  University,  1902;  A.M.,  1903;  Harvard;  Yale.  <(>  K  * 

Instructor  at  Martinsburg,  W.  Va.,  High  School,  the  Choate  School. 
Member  of  Modern  Language  Association,  National  Council  of 
Teachers  of  English,  New  England  Association  of  Teachers  of 
English,  New  England  Association  of  Colleges  and  Secondary 
Schools,  Harvard  Club  of  Boston.  Editor:  The  Bulletin  of  the 
Phillips  Exeter  Academy. 


39 


Henry  Martin  Shute,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  German.    Appointed  February,  1907. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Salem,  Mass.,  High  School  A  B  Tufts 
1902;  A.M.,   1902.     AY 

Instructor  at  University  of  Maine.  Member  of  National  Modern 
Language  Association. 


Fletcher  Nichols  Robinson,  A.B. 

Instructor  in  Latin.    Appointed  September,  1909. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Reading,  Mass.,  High  School.  A.B.,  Har- 
vard, 1909.    ijiBE 

Member  of  American  Philological  Association,  New  England 
Classical  Association. 


Henry  Lewis  Sweet,  A.B. 

Instructor  in  Mathematics.    Appointed  October,  1910. 

Prepared  for  college  at  New  Haven  High  School,  New  Haven, 
Conn.    A.B.,  Amherst,  1907.     <(>  T  A 

Instructor  at  University  of  Maine,  Orono,  Me.;    Principal  at 
Orono,  Me.,  High  School. 


Walter  Hamilton  Gillespie,  A.B.,  A.  M.,  Ph.D. 

Instructor  in  Latin.    Appointed  October,  1910. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Hamilton  Collegiate  Institute,  Canada. 
A.B.,  Toronto  University,  1894;  A.M.,  Harvard  University,  1896; 
Ph.D.,  1900;   Chicago  University. 

Instructor  at  Milton  Academy,  Milton,  Mass.;  University  School, 
Cleveland,  0.;  Cheshire  School,  Cheshire,  Conn.  Member  of 
American  Philological  Association,  New  England  Classical  Asso- 
ciation. 


40 


Edwin  Victor  Spooner,  S.B. 

Instructor  in  French.    Appointed  June,  1911. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Hudson,  Mass.,  High  School.  B.S.,  Dart- 
mouth, 1894;  Harvard.     SX 

Instructor  at  Bridgton,  Me.,  Academy,  Detroit  University  School, 
Lawrenceville  School. 


Corning  Benton,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  English.    Appointed  September,  1911. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Newton,  Mass.,  High  School.  A.B.,  Har- 
vard, 1907;  A.M.,  1908;  Columbia.  II  H  Assistant  in  History, 
Harvard  University. 

Member  of  New  England  Association  of  Colleges  and  Secondary 
Schools. 


Paul  Huntington  Linaberry,  A.B..  A.M. 
Instructor  in  French.    Appointed  October,  1912. 


A.B. 


Prepared  for  college  at  the  Oneonta,  N.  Y.,  High  School. 
Harvard,  1908;  A.M.,  1910. 

Instructor  at  Ecole  de  Commerce,  Lyon,  France;  Lycee  Ampere, 
Lyon,  France;  Lecteur  d'  anglais  a  la  Faculte  des  Lettres,  Univer- 
site  de  Lyon,  France.  Member  of  the  New  England  Modern  Lan- 
guage Association.    Harvard  Teachers'  Association. 


Alfred  Reynolds  Wightman,  A.B.,  A.M.,  Ph.D. 

Preceptorial  Instructor.    Appointed  October,  1912. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Rogers  High  School,  Newport,  R.  I. 
A.B.,  Brown,  1893;  A.M.,  Harvard,  1900;  Ph.D.,  1909.  Cam- 
marian  Club.    <(>  B  K 

Instructor  at  Morgan  Park,  111.,  Academy,  University  of  Vermont, 
Hobart  College,  Cambridge  Latin  School. 


41 


Rev.  Frederick  Joseph  Libby,  A.B.,  S.T.B. 

Instructor  in  the  Bible  and  in  German.     Appointed  October,  1912. 

Prepared  for  college  at  High  School,  Richmond,  Me.  A.B., 
Bowdoin,  1894;  University  of  Berlin,  Heidelberg,  Marburg,  Oxford; 
S.T.B. ,  Andover  Theological  Seminary,  1902.    A  A  ej>;   <i>  B  K 

Instructor  at  Boothbay  Harbor  High  School,  Richmond  High 
School. 


Otis  Munro  Bigelow,  Jr.,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  French  and  Spanish.     Appointed  September,  1915. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Westminster  School.  A.B.,  Yale,  1904; 
A.M.,  1907;   p  0  II;  Colony  (Yale  Sheffield);  4>  B  K 

Instructor  at  Kingsley  School,  Essex  Falls,  N.  J.;   Sheffield  Scien- 

liflicScl I    Vale;   Central  High  School,  Syracuse,  N,  Y.     Member 

of  Graduates  Club,  New  Haven;  Yale  Club,  New  York. 


Walter  Everett  Doe,  A.B. 

Instructor  in  Mathematics.    Appointed  September,  1915. 

Prepared  for  college  at  the  Phillips  Exeter  Academy.  A.B., 
Wesley  an  University,  1908;    *  N  0 

Instructor  at  Holderness  School,  Plymouth,  N.  H.  Association  of 
Teachers  of  Mathematics  in  New  England. 


Robert  Ray  Newton,  A.B. 

Instructor  in  History.    Appointed  September,  1915. 

A.B.,    Williams,    1914;     University    of    Wisconsin;      Gargoyle. 
(Absent  on  leave  in  France.) 


42 


... 


Roy  Rubins  Shrewsbury,  A.A.G.O. 

Musical  Director.    Appointed  June,  191C>. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Redlands  High  School,  Redlands,  Cal. 
A.A.G.O.,  University  of  Redlands. 

Member  of  American  Guild  of  Organists.  Author  of  "Music  in 
its  Relation  to  Physics,"  "Music  and  Religion,"  essays  in  peri- 
odicals. 


Arthur  Merriam  Clarke,  A.B. 

Instructor  in  Physics.    Appointed  May,  1917. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Wellesley,   Mass.,  High  School.     A.B. 
Amherst,  1917;   ATA 


Howard  Stanley  Stuckey,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  Latin.    Appointed  May,  1917. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Masten  Park  High  School,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 
A.B.,  Princeton,  1908;  A.M.,  1915;   Terrace  Club.    <|>  B  K 

Instructor  at  Marietta  Academy,  Asheville  School,  Hill  School, 
Nichols  School,  Brooklyn  Polytechnic. 


Earl  Alonzo  Barrett,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  French.    Appointed  September,  1917. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Detroit  Central  High  School.  Michigan 
University;  A.B.,  Cornell  University,  1914;  A.M.,  University  of 
Minnesota,  1916.    $  K  Z,  AA*,  <|>BK 

Instructor  at  Huron  College,  University  of  Minnesota,  St. 
John's  School,  Manlius,  N.  Y. 


43 


Isaac  Leonard  Pearl,  S.B. 

Instructor  in  Chemistry.    Appointed  September,  1917. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Vermont  Academy.  S.B.,  University  of 
Vermont,  1910.    K  2 

Instructor  at  Brigham  Academy,  Bakersfield,  Vt.;  Chemist  with 
the  General  Electric  Company,  of  Schenectady,  N.  Y.,  Arthur  D. 
Little,  Inc.,  Boston,  Standard  Alcohol  Company,  Fullerton,  La. 


Henry  Adelbert  White,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  English.    Appointed  September,  1917. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Cazenovia  Seminary,  Cazenovia,  N.  Y. 
A.B.,  Wesleyan,  1904;  A.M.,  1905;  A.M.,  Harvard,  1906;  A.M., 
Yale,  1908.    ATA 

Professor  of  English  at  Lombard  College,  Galesburg,  111.,  Purdue 
University,  Colby  College,  McMaster  University,  Toronto.  Vice- 
President  of  Indiana  Association  of  College  Teachers  of  English. 
Member  of  Illinois  Association  of  Teachers  of  English,  Advisory 
Council  of  the  Simplified  Spelling  Board,  Modern  Language  Asso- 
ciation of  America.  Assisted  Fanny  J.  Crosby  in  "Memories  of 
Eighty  Years. "    Editor  of  Stevenson's  "  Master  of  Ballantrae. " 


Frederick  Raymond  Whitman,  A.B.,  A.M. 

Instructor  in  History.    Appointed  September,  1917. 

Prepared  for  college  at  Oneonta,  N.  Y.,  State  Normal  School. 
A.B.,  Princeton,  1902;  A.M.,  1905.    <f>  B  K 

Instructor  at  New  Rochelle,  N.  Y.,  High  School,  Brooklyn  Latin 
School,  Newark  Academy.  Member  of  Commission  for  the  Revi- 
sion of  History  Requirements. 


Francis  Edward  Heath,  S.B. 

Instructor  in  Mathematics  and  Mechanical  Drawing.     Appointed  December,  1917. 
A.B.,  Colby  College,  1917. 


44 


Exeter's  History 


1781.  April  3.    The  Academy  incorporated. 

1781.  December  18.     First  meeting  of  the  Board  of  Trustees. 

1782.  January  9.  Gifts  from  Dr.  John  Phillips  received  by  Trustees  and  Constitution  adopted. 
1781-2.     The  first  Academy  building  erected. 

1783.  May  1.  Academy  formally  opened.    First  Academy  building  dedicated  and  William 
Woodbridge  installed  as  Preceptor. 

1790.  Benjamin  Abbot  became  second  Principal. 

1794.  Second  Academy  building  erected. 

1795.  April  21.    Death  of  John  Phillips,  LL.D.,  the  founder,  aged  76  years. 
1809.  First  tuition  fee  levied.     ($2.00  per  year.) 

1818.  July  16.    The  "Golden  Branch  Society"  founded. 

1835.  August  20.    Daniel  Webster  elected  a  Trustee  of  the  Academy. 

1838.  August  22.    Gideon  Lane  Soule,  '13,  became  third  Principal. 

1838.  August  23.     "Abbot  Festival"  celebrated. 

1855.  Abbot  Hall  erected,  room  rent  fixed  at  $1.00  per  year  for  each  student. 

1856.  April  23.    The  "Christian  Fraternity"  founded. 
1858.  "Studying  out  of  school"  introduced. 

1870.  December  17.     Second  Academy  building  destroyed  by  fire. 

1872.  June  19.     Third  Academy  building  completed  and  "Soule  Festival"  celebrated. 

1873.  May  22.     Albert  Cornelius  Perkins  elected  fourth  Principal. 
1878.  March.     The  Exonian  founded. 

1878.  Baseball  and  football  rivalry  with  Andover  begun. 

1880.  Vol.  1.  of  the  Pean  published. 

1881.  The  "G.  L.  Soule  Literary  Society"  founded. 

1883.  June  20.    General  i-eunion  of  alumni.    Centennial  celebration. 
1883-4.     G.  A.  Wentworth  acted  as  Principal. 

1884.  Walter  Quincy  Scott  elected  fifth  Principal. 
1886.  First  gymnasium  erected. 

1886.  "Ye  Lit"  founded. 

1888-91.     Physics  and  chemistry  laboratories  erected. 

1890.  Charles  Everett  Fish  elected  sixth  Principal. 

1893.  Soule  Hall  erected. 

1895.  Harlan  Page  Amen,  '75,  elected  seventh  Principal. 

1896.  Peabody  Hall  erected. 

1902.  Merrill  Hall  and  recitation  building  presented  to  the  Academy. 

1903.  Alumni  Hall  and  Hoyt  Hall  erected  and  Emery  House  purchased. 
1903.  June  16-17.     Fourth  general  reunion  of  alumni. 

1905.  Plimpton  Playing  Fields  presented  to  the  Academy. 

1907.  April  10.     First  Dunbar  Hall  destroyed  by  fire. 

1908.  New  Dunbar  Hall  erected. 

1910.  Plimpton  Fields-Beyond  presented  to  the  Academy. 

1911.  Davis  Library  erected. 

1912.  Webster  Hall  erected. 

1914.  Lewis  Perry  elected  eighth  Principal. 

1914.  July  3.     Third  Academy  building  destroyed  by  fire. 

1914.  Graduates  House  opened. 

1915.  October  9.     Founder's  Day.     Fourth  Academy  building  dedicated. 

1917.  First  Academy  building  restored  to  original  site. 

1918.  February  22.    Thompson  Gymnasium  and  Swimming  Pool  dedicated. 

1918.  February  22,    One  hundredth  anniversary  of  the  Golden  Branch  Literary  Society. 


45 


SENIOR  CLASH,  1893  — REUNION,  JUNE  7-8,  1918 


FACULTY,  1899-1900 


46 


WE  pass.  Out  from  the  narrower  circle  of  school  life,  we  go  into  the  larger  fields  where  the 
world  is  calling,  calling  insistently,  even  almost  unwilling  to  give  us  time  to  complete  our 
further  education.  "Exeter  is  enough,"  it  says.  Many  of  us  this  year  have  been  chafing 
at  the  bit  eager  to  join  our  fellow  Exonians  fighting  in  the  Great  Cause.  And  so  one  of  the  biggest 
Senior  classes  must  leave  Exeter  with  prospects  of  being  one  of  the  smallest  classes  to  begin  with 
or  finish  college.  How  much  more  then  will  Exeter  mean  to  us!  Our  Alma  Mater!  Here  we  have 
received  our  training,  here  developed  our  characters,  here  made  our  life-long  friends,  here  we  have 
formed  the  memories  of  the  future. 

What  has  the  future  for  us?  For  some  a  college  course;  for  others,  a  beginning  in  their  life- 
work;  for  all,  service  in  the  Great  War.  We  may  finally  become  scholars,  professors,  doctors, 
lawyers,  business-men,  soldiers;  but  no  matter  where  we  are  or  what  we  may  be,  the  memories  of 
days  at  Exeter,  of  their  joys  and  sorrows,  their  successes  and  failures,  can  never  leave  us.  May 
we  in  the  future  add  to  the  old  school  ten-fold  what  she  has  given  us  in  such  overflowing  measure. 


47 


02 

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m 


Senior  Biographies 


CHESTER  PERRY  ALLISON 

Maemakth,  N.  U. 
"Chet." 
"His  words  and  works  are  clear  and  straight." 
Entered  Junior  Year;    Class  Football  (2);    Academy  Foot" 
ball  Squad  (1);    Academy  Crew  Squad  (2);    Academy  Track 
Squad  (1);   Senior  Council;   Western  Club;   Four-Year  Club; 
Kappa  Delta  Pi;    Honor  Man,  Second  Group   (1);    Honor- 
able Mention  (1);   Chapel  Monitor. 


THOMAS  WALLEY  BACCHUS,  JR. 
Wilmington,  Del. 
"Tom."     "Walley." 
"And  oar'd  with  his  good  arms  in  lusty  stroke. " 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Athletic  Association,  Vice- 
President;    Academy  Crew  (3),  Captain   (1);    Senior  Class, 
Vice-President;      Senior     Council;      Christian     Fraternity; 
P.   E.   A.   Crew  Association;    Rifle  Club;    Assembly   Club, 
Secretary-Treasurer;    Pine  Tree  State  Club;    Cornell  Club; 
Southern  Club;   Phi  Epsilon  Sigma;   Honorable  Mention. 


JONATHAN  YOUNG  BALLARD 

Fokt  Worth,  Tex. 
"Johnnie." 
"A  cheerful  life  is  what  the  Muses  love." 
Entered   Senior  Year;    Princeton   Club;    Southern   Club; 
Golf  Team. 


49 


JOSEPH  HUDSON  BARWISE,  JR. 
Fort  Worth,  Tex. 
"Seth." 

"  Yes,  I'm  from  Dixie. " 
Entered    Upper    Middle   Year;     Crew    Squad;     Christian 
Fraternity;    Princeton  Club;    Texas  Club;    Southern  Club, 
Vice-President;     Phi   Epsilon   Sigma;    Exeter   Battalion,    D 
Company,  Sergeant. 


JAMES  EDWARD  BATHGATE,  3RD 

Basking  Ridge,  N.  J. 
"Jim." 
"Modesty  is  of  the  color  of  virtue." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Christian  Fraternity;  Prince- 
ton   Club;     Alpha   Nu;     Golden    Branch    Literary    Society, 
Librarian;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B,  Corporal;  Chorus; 
The  Exonian,  Associate  Editor,  Assignment  Editor. 


ROWLAND  WILLIAM  BERKELEY 

Limington,  Me. 

"Berk."  "Ed." 
"Wisdom  is  belter  than  rubies." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Lower  Middle  Class  Base- 
ball Team;  Senior  Class  Hockey  Team;  Christian  Fraternity; 
Harvard  Club;  Maine  Club;  Golden  Branch  Literary  Society, 
Treasurer;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D;  Orchestra; 
Chorus;  Honor  Man,  First  Group  (6);  Honorable  Mention 
(14);  Cum  Laudc  Society;  Wentworth  Mathematical  Prize 
(Third). 


50 


ROqER  BIRTWELL 

Hampton  Falls,  N.  H. 
"Bunny." 
"Some  recommend  the  bowling  green. " 
Entered  Junior  Year;    Junior,  Lower  Middle,  and  Upper 
Middle  Class  Baseball  Teams;   Championship  Class  Baseball 
Team;  Academy  Baseball  Team,   Assistant  Manager;   Inter- 
class  Bowling  Tournament,  Manager;    Lower  Middle,  Upper 
Middle,   and  Senior  Class   Bowling  Teams;    Championship 
Class   Bowling   Team    (1),   Captain;     Class   Bowling   Team 
(1);    Senior   Class   Cap   and   Gown   Committee;     Christian 
Fraternity;    Harvard  Club;    Granite  State  Club;    Four-Year 
Club;   Cercle  Francais;   G.  L.  Soule  Literary  Society;   Honor 
Man,  First  Group;   Honorable  Mention. 


F^l 

Bf           **.. 

'  JMhn 

...  ^-.mm 

EDWARD  HOOPER  BOWEN 

Fall  River,  Mass. 

"Ed." 

"By'r  lady,  he's  a  good  musician." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year ;  Harvard  Club ;  Bay  State  Club ; 

Christian  Fraternity;  Chorus  (2);  Glee  Club  (2);  Orchestra  (2). 


STEDMAN  BUTTRICK,  JR. 

Concord,  Mass. 
"Sted." 
"Learning  by  study  must  be  won." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Academy  Crew,  Manager; 
Christian  Fraternity;    Elson  Art  Exhibit  Committee;    Bay 
State   Club;     Harvard   Club;     Rifle   Club;    Golden   Branch 
Literary  Society;    Honor  Man,  Second  Group  (2);    Honor- 
able Mention  (2) ;   Chapel  Monitor. 


51 


ROBERT  WOODWARD  CALLOWAY 

Baltimore,  Md. 

"Cal."     "Bob." 

"With  surety  stronger  than  Achilles'  arm." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Academy  Football  Squad 

(3);   Academy  Second  Football  Team;   Class  Baseball  Team; 

Championship  Upper  Middle  Baseball  Team;    Cornell  Club; 

Rifle  Club;    Fencing  Club;    Christian  Fraternity;    Southern 

Club;  Church  Monitor. 


EDWARD  CAME    CLARK 

SOMERVILLE,    MASS. 

"Ed."  "Clarkie." 
"The  mind  is  the  standard  of  the  man." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Championship  Senior  Class 
Track  Team;  Track  Squad  (2);  Senior  Class  Cap  and 
Gown  Committee;  Christian  Fraternity;  Tech.  Club;  Bay 
State  Club;  Golden  Branch  Literary  Society,  Secretary; 
Golden  Branch  Debating  Team;  Glee  Club  (2);  Chorus  (2); 
Chapel  Choir;  Honor  Man,  First  Group;  Honor  Man,  Sec- 
ond Group;   Honorable  Mention  (3). 


HUQH  O'NEALE  CLEMENT 

Rutland,  Vt. 
"Nemo."     "Clem." 
"A  good  heart,  and  a  level  head." 
Entered    Lower    Middle  Year;    Golf    Squad;    Rifle    Club; 
Chorus;   Sunday  Chapel  Monitor. 


52 


CLEMENT  BIDDLE  PENROSE  COBB 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
"Clem."     "Ty." 
"The  gentleman  is  learned  and  a  most  rare  speaker." 
Entered  Senior  Year;    Senior  Class  Hockey  Team;    Senior 
Class  Bowling  Team;    Crew  Squad;    Christian  Fraternity; 
Princeton  Club;  Empire  State  Club;   Williams  Club;   Golden 
Branch    Literary    Society;     Inter-Society    Debating    Team; 
Musical  Clubs;    Orchestra;    Mandolin  Club;    Chapel  Quin- 
tette;  Jazz  Band;  The  1918  Pean,  Associate  Editor;   Honor- 
able  Mention;    Honor   Man,    Second   Group;     Cum   Laude 
Society. 


CECIL  CRAFTS  COLE 

North  Craftsbury,  Vt. 
"India."     "Smoky."     "C.  C." 
"Deep  versed  in  books." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Ver- 
mont Club;    Harvard  Club;    Rifle  Club;    Deutscher  Verein; 
Golden     Branch     Literary    Society,     Librarian,     Secretary; 
Chorus;    The  Exonian,  Associate  Editor,  Assignment  Editor, 
Secretary;   Honor  Man,  Second  Group  (3);   Honorable  Men- 
tion (6);    Wentworth  Mathematical  Prize  (Second);    Chapel 
Monitor. 


HORATIO  COLONY,  2D 

Keene,  N.  H. 

"Horace."     "Ray." 

"He  wears  the  rose  of  youth  upon  him." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;   Christian  Fraternity;   Cercle 

Francais;    Rifle  Club;    Granite  State  Club;    Harvard  Club; 

Golden  Branch  Literary  Society,  Librarian;  Exeter  Battalion; 

Honorable  Mention  (1). 


53 


TROY  COMBS 

HlNDMAN,    Ky. 

"Troy." 
"He  is  noble  u'ho  acts  nobly." 
Entered  Junior  Year;  Track  Squad  (2);  Senior  Class 
Football  Team;  P.  E.  A.  Police;  Christian  Fraternity; 
Southern  Club;  Harvard  Club;  Four-Year  Club;  G.  L. 
Soule  Literary  Society;  Chapel  Monitor;  Championship 
Abbot  Hall  Baseball  Team   (3). 


LAWRENCE  MELVIN  CONANT 

Upper  Montclair,  N.  J. 

"Larry."     "Conie." 

"A  man  of  intellect." 

Entered  Senior  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    New  Jersey 

Club;    Golden  Branch  Literary  Society;    Exeter  Battalion, 

Company    B;     Chorus;     Honor    Man,    Second    Group    (2); 

Honorable  Mention  (1);   Cum  Laude  Society. 


GEORGE  ALBERT  CURRAN 

Calais,  Me. 
"Joe."     "Red." 
"Content  to  pursue  the  even  tenor  of  his  way." 
Entered  Senior  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Maine  Club; 
Exeter  Battalion,  Company  A;   Chorus. 


54 


JOHN  GOULD  CURTIS 

Erie,  Pa. 

"Johannes  Factotum  "     "Johnny." 

"A  solid  substantial  fellow  in  more  ways  than  one." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Rifle 

Club;    Harvard    Club;     Penn    State   Club;    The    E   Book, 

Assistant   Editor;    The   Phillips  Exeter  Monthly,   Associate 

Editor;    Andover  Game,  Fall,  1917,  Manager;      Vaudeville 

Show,  Winter,  1917,  Manager;   Chapel  Monitor. 


STUART  BODGE  DAMON 

Leominster,  Mass. 

"Sine." 

"A  companion  that  is  cheerful  is  ivorth  gold." 

Entered  Upple  Middle  Year;    Golf  Squad  (2);    Academy 

Tennis  Team,  Manager;    Athletic   Association;   Senior  Class 

Picture    Committee;     Dartmouth    Club;     Bay   State    Club; 

Christian  Fraternity;   Phi  Epsilon  Sigma. 


GEORGE  EDWARD  DARLING 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

"Ned." 

"So  wise,  so  young,  they  say." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Harvard  Club;    Christian 

Fraternity;    Penn    State    Club;    Honor   Man,   First  Group; 

Honor  Man,  Second  Group;    Honorable  Mention;  Prentiss 

Cummings  Upper  Middle  Greek  Prize:  Cum  Laude  Society. 


55 


KENT  CROSBY  DARLING 
Pittsburgh,  Pa. 
"Casey." 
"He  xvas  a  soldier  good." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Battalion  Baseball,    Com- 
pany A,  Captain;  Christian  Fraternity;  Harvard  Club;  Rifle 
Club;    Rifle  Team;    Penn    State  Club,  Secretary-Treasurer; 
Golden  Branch  Literary  Society;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company 
A,  Sergeant,  Signal  Corps,  First  Sergeant,  Second  Lieutenant; 
Chorus;   Mandolin  Club. 


CYRUS  LAWRENCE  DAY 

Summit,  N.  J. 
"Cy." 
"The  true  knight  of  learning." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Class  Day  Officers,  Valedic- 
torian;    Christian    Fraternity;      Rifle    Club,    Rifle    Team; 
Deutscher   Verein;     New    Jersey    Club;     Kappa    Delta    Pi; 
Golden  Branch  Literary  Society;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company 
B,  Corporal,  Sergeant;    The  Phillips  Exeter  Monthly,  Asso- 
ciate Editor;    The  Service  Issue  of  the  Exonian,  Managing 
Editor;    Honor   Man,   First  Group    (5),   Second  Group   (1); 
Honorable  Mention  (16);   Cum  Laude  Society. 


ELMORE  LAMPREY  DEARBORN 

Hampton.  N.  H. 
"Dear."     "Dearb." 
"Full  many  a  flower  is  bom  to  blush  unseen." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;   Member  Granite  State  Club; 
Exeter  Battalion,  Company  A. 


56 


CHARLES  WINCHESTER  DeVITO 

West  Medford,  Mass. 

"Win." 

"  Anything  for  a  quiet  life." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Academy  Track  Squad  (2); 

Upper  Middle  Class  Baseball  Squad;    Tennis  Squad;    Senior 

Class    Bowling    Team;     Class    Hockey    Squad;     Christian 

Fraternity;   Rifle  Club;   Cercle  Francais;   Bay  State  Club. 


JOHN  ELI  DeWOLF,  JR. 

Milwaukee,  Wis. 
"Jack." 
"Be  good  and  let  who  will  be  clever." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Yale  Club;    Western  Club; 
Exeter  Battalion,  Company  A. 


WALTER  CONRAD  DIETZEL 

Rockville,  Conn. 
"Walt."     "Doc."     "Dietz." 
"By  nature  honest,  by  experience  wise." 
Entered  Senior  Year;   Track  Squad;   Christian  Fraternity; 
Yale  Club. 


57 


WINTHROP  GRIFFIN  DOW 

Exeter,  N.  H. 
"Win." 
"An  affable  and  courteous  gentleman." 
Entered  Junior  Year;    Class  Hockey  Team;    Class  Bowl- 
ing   Team;     Academy    Golf    Squad;     Christian    Fraternity; 
Granite  State  Club;   Harvard  Club;   Cercle  Francais;   Four- 
Year  Club;   Phi  Epsilon  Sigma;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company 
D,  Sergeant;    Honor  Man,  Second  Group   (3);    Honorable 
Mention  (2). 


JASON  RUSSELL  DRAPER 

Plymouth,  N.  H. 

"Russ." 

"A  man  deserving  of  -praise." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Yale  Club;    Granite  State 
Club;   Christian  Fraternity. 


GORDON  PAGE  EAGER 

Marlboro,  Mass. 

"Fat." 

"Like  two  single  gentlemen  rolled  into  one." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Athletic  Association;    Class 

Football  Team   (2);    Track  Squad    (1);    Academy  Baseball 

Team,  Assistant  Manager,  Manager;    Cheer  Leader;    Class 

Day  Officer,  Prophet;    June  Ball  Officer;    Harvard  Club  (3), 

Vice-President  (1);    Bay  State  Club  (3),  Vice-President  (1), 

President  (1);   Christian  Fraternity  (3);   Assembly  Club  (2); 

Kappa    Epsilon    Pi;     Cast,    "Treasure    Island,"    "Sherlock 

Holmes;"    Honorable  Mention;  Senior  Council. 


58 


THOMAS  SECHLER  EDMONDS 

Kenilworth,  III. 

"Tom." 

"He  makes  sweet  music." 

Entered  Junior  Year;   Track  Squad;   Christian  Fraternity; 

Harvard  Club;    Cercle  Francais;    Four-Year  Club;    Exeter 

Battalion,  Company  A;    Musical  Clubs;    Mandolin  Club  (3); 

Glee  Club;  Chorus;  Chapel  Choir. 


JOSIAH  RICHARDSON  ELLIOTT,  JR. 

Plymouth,  N.  H. 

"Joe." 

"Whose  heart  is  true  as  steel." 

Entered  Senior  Year ;   Championship  Class  Bowling  Team ; 

Tennis  Squad;  Academy  Tennis  Team;  Christian  Fraternity; 

Granite  State  Club;  Yale  Club;  Honor  Man,  Second  Group 

(2);  Cum  Laude  Society. 


ALDEN  FARNUM  ERIKSON 

Waltham,  Mass. 
"Eric." 
"Men  of  few  words  are  the  best  men." 
Entered  Senior  Year;    Senior  Class  Hockey  team;    Tech. 
Club;  Bay  State  Club. 


59 


S.  LaSALLE  FELHEIM 

Erie,  Pa. 
"Pal."     "Fellie." 

''Knowledge  is  more  than  equivalent  to  Jorce." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Penn  State  Club;     Harvard 
Club;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B. 


JOSEPH  HOWARD  FLATHER 

Nashua,  N.  H. 
"Flath." 
"Next  to  love,  quietness." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Upper  Middle  Baseball  Team ; 
Rifle  Club;    Tech.   Club;    Granite  State  Club;    Honorable 
Mention  (2). 


HAROLD  BRIGGS  FROST 

Brockton,  Mass. 

"Bill."     "Frosty." 

"Merit  wins  the  soul." 

Filtered    Senior   Year;     Class   Football   Squad;     Christian 

Fraternity;   Bay  State  Club;   Tech.  Club;    Exeter  Battalion, 

Company  B;   Rifle  Club. 


60 


JONATHAN  PIERPONT  QILMORE 

Marlboro,  Mass. 

"Gil."     "Gilly." 

"I'll  catch  it  ere  it  come  to  ground." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Academy  Football  Squad  (2) ; 

Academy    Baseball   Squad    (3);     Christian    Fraternity;     Phi 

Theta  Psi;    Golden  Branch  Literary  Society;    Chapel  Choir; 

Chorus;  The  E  Book,  Editor-in-Chief;  The  Exonian,  Assistant 

Business  Manager  (2). 


WILLIAM  MacWHINNEY  GORBY 

Terre  Haute,  Ind. 

"Bill."     "Mac." 

"Good  sense  and  good  nature  are  never  separated." 

Entered    Upper    Middle   Year;     Academy    Track    Squad; 

Christian    Fraternity;     Deutscher    Verein;     Western    Club; 

Exeter  Battalion;    Honor  Man,  Second  Group;    Honorable 

Mention. 


GEORGE  CURTIS  GRANT 

Akron,  Ohio. 
"Red."     "General." 
"Great  is  the  glory,  for  the  strife  is  hard. " 
Entered  Senior  Year;    Track  Squad;    Ohio  Club;    Western 
Club;  Cornell  Club. 


61 


WILLIAM  STERN  GUTWILLIG 

Far  Rockaway,  N.  Y. 
"Bill."     "Goot." 
"  The  secret  of  success  is  constancy  of  purpose. " 
Entered    Upper    Middle    Year;    Senior    Class    Football 
Team  Manager;  Inter-Class  Bowling  Tournament;  Christian 
Fraternity;    Cercle  Francais;    Empire  State  Club;    Cast  of 
"The  American  Lord,"  "Julius  Caesar;"  Golden  Branch  Lit- 
erary Society,  Treasurer,  Vice-President;    Exeter  Battalion; 
Honor  Man. 


RICHARD  MARSDEN  HASKELL 

Tulsa,  Okla. 

"Dick."     "Hask." 

"A  friend  to  all  who  know  him." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;   Christian  Fraternity;   Cercle 

Francais;    Rifle  Club;    Southern  Club;    Tech.   Club;  Rifle 

Team ;  Western  Club ;  Assembly  Club ;  Cornell  Club ;   Exeter 

Battalion,  Company  C;  Chorus  (3). 


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DOUGLAS  PARRY  HEAD 

Minneapolis,  Minn. 

"Doug." 

"Thy  modesty  is  a  candle  to  thy  merit." 

Entered  Senior  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Yale  Club; 

Western   Club;    Exeter  Battalion,   Company   B,   Corporal, 

Sergeant,  First  Sergeant. 


62 


RALPH  PRATT  HO  AG  LAND,  JR. 

Wollaston,  Mass. 
"Ralph."     "Hoagie."     "Hoag." 
"And  was  accounted  a  good  actor." 
Entered  Junior  Year;    Track  Squad;    Academy  Baseball 
Team,  Assistant   Manager;   Academy  Crew,   Manager   (Re- 
signed);  Junior  Class  Tennis  Team;   Junior  and  Senior  Class 
Hockey  Teams;    Lower  and  Senior  Class  Bowling  Teams; 
Championship  Upper  Middle  Class  Bowling  Team,  Captain; 
Christian  Fraternity;    Four-Year  Club;     Rifle  Club;     Cast, 
"Sherlock    Holmes,"    "Treasure    Island,"    "The    American 
Lord,"  "Waterloo,"  "Julius  Caesar;"  Golden  Branch  Literary 
Society;   Inter-Society  Debating  Team;    Honor  Man,  Second 
Group  (5);  Honorable  Mention;  Gordon  Bible  Prize  (Third). 


JOSIAH  GILBERT  HOLLAND 

"Denver,  Col. 

"Joe." 

"  To  know  him  was  to  love  him." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Company  Football -Team; 

Christian  Fraternity;    Tech.  Club;    Western    Club;    Exeter 

Battalion,  Company  A    Corporal,  Color  Sergeant; 'Mandolin 

Club. 


CHARLES  PARKER  HOLMES 

New  Bedford,  Mass. 
"Peck."  "Charlie." 
" Born  for  success,  he  seemed." 
Entered  Junior  Year;  Class  Drill  Squad;  Junior  Football 
Team;  Class  Tennis  Team;  Championship  Class  Tennis 
Team;  Tennis  Squad  (4);  Harvard  Interscholastic  Tennis 
Team  (2);  Academy  Tennis  Team  (2),  Captain  (1);  Class 
Hockey  Team  (2);  Class  Bowling  Team  (4);  Championship 
Class  Bowling  Team  (3);  Academy  Hockey  Team,  Assistant 
Manager;  Academy  Gymnasium  Team,  Manager;  Cham- 
pionship Class  Bowling  Team  Manager;  Finalist  School 
Tennis  Championship,  1916,  1917;  P.  E.  A.  Police,  Chief; 
Class  Day  Officers,  First  Marshal;  June  Ball  Officer;  Senior 
Council;  Harvard  Club;  Bay  State  Club;  Yale  Club;  Four- 
Year  Club;  Kappa  Delta  Pi;  The  Phillips  Exeter  Monthly, 
Associate  Editor,  Business  Manager,  1915-17;  Prize  of  the 
New  England  Federation  of  Harvard  Clubs. 


63 


CARROL  HYDE  HUDDLESTON 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
"Red."     "Cal." 
"Happy  is  the  house  that  shelters  this  man." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Senior  Class  Picture  Com- 
mittee, Chairman;  Executive  Committee;    Christian  Frater- 
nity; Harvard  Club;  Empire  State  Club;  G.  L.Soule  Literary 
Society,    Treasurer,    President;     Alpha    Nu;     Inter-Society 
Debating  Team;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company  A,  Sergeant; 
The  191,8  Pean,  Managing  Editor. 


RICHARD  DeLANO  HUDSON 
Brooklyn,  N.  Y. 
"Skinny."     "Dick." 
"Actions  speak  louder  than  words." 
Entered  Junior  Year;    Junior  Class  Drill  Squad;    Fresh 
River  Crew;  Academy  Football  Squad  (2) ;  Academy  Second 
Football  Team;   Academy  Track  Team  (3);   Academy  Track 
Squad  (4);  Senior  Class  Championship  Track  Team;  B.  A.  A. 
Interscholastic  Team;    Senior  Class  Pin  Committee,  Chair- 
man;    Cap    and    Gown    Committee,    Chairman;     Christian 
Fraternity;   Four-Year  Club,  Secretary-Treasurer;   Princeton 
Club;    Empire  State  Club;    Cast  "Treasure  Island;"    Foot- 
ball  Programme,   Business   Manager;    Faculty   Shield    Pro- 
gramme, Business  Manager;   Honorable  Mention  (3). 


ARTHUR  LEWIS  HURST 

Glen  Ridge,  N.  J. 

"Art." 

"  Thy  face  the  index  of  a  feeling  mind. " 

Entered    Upper    Middle  Year;     The   Exonian,    Associate 

Editor,  Managing    Editor,  Editor-in-Chief;    Senior  Council; 

Senior  Class  Memorial  Committee,  Chairman;   Crew  Squad; 

Track  Squad;  Class  Day  Officer,  Historian;  June  Ball  Officer; 

Christian  Fraternity;     New  Jersey   Club;    Princeton  Club; 

Alpha  Nu;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B. 


64 


CRAWFORD  JOHNSON 

St.  Louis,  Mo. 

"Crawf." 

"'Tis  well  to  be  merry  and  wise." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Class  Football  Team   (2); 

Academy    Baseball    Team,  Assistant    Manager    (Resigned); 

Yale    Club;     Tech.   Club,    President;     Phi   Epsilon    Sigma; 

Exeter  Battalion;   Chorus;   The  Exonian,  Assignment  ]Editor 

(Resigned);   Honorable  Mention;   Prentiss  Cummings  Greek 

Prize,  Honorable  Mention. 


ROBERT  DEWEY  JOHNSON 

Wilmington,  Vt. 
"Bob."     "Johnny." 
"Gentle  of  speech;  beneficent  of  mind. " 
Entered  Junior  Year;    Academy  Track  Squad  (4);    Acad- 
emy Track  Team  (1);  Junior  Class  Hockey  Team  (1);  Lower 
Middle  Class  Hockey  Team;    Senior  Class  Pin  Committee; 
Vermont  Club;   Cornell  Club;   Honor  Man,  First  Group  (l); 
Second  Group  (4);   Honorable  Mention  (3). 


ROBERT  GROAT  JOHNSON 

Hudson,  N.  Y. 

"Bob." 

"And  say  to  all  the  world,  this  was  a  man." 

Entered    Junior    Year;     Athletic    Association;     Academy 

Football  Squad;    Class  Football  Team  (3);    Academy  Track 

Team;    Championship  Class  Track  Team  (3),  Manager  (1); 

Class  Hockey  Team,   Manager;    Class  Bowling  Team   (4); 

Championship  Class  Drill  Squad;    Senior  Council;    Empire 

State  Club,   President;     Assembly   Club;    Four-Year  Club, 

Vice-President;    Yale  Club;    Christian  Fraternity  Cabinet; 

Alpha  Nu;    The  1918  Pean,  Business  Manager  (Resigned); 

Honorable  Mention  (2). 


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MALCOLM  SEWALL  JONES 

Newburyport,  Mass. 

"Bud." 

tfA  moral,  sensible,  well-bred  man." 

Entered    Upper    Middle   Year;     Academy    Track    Squad; 

Deutscher  Verein;    Rifle  Club;    Harvard  Club;    Bay  State 

Club;   Exeter  Battalion,  Corporal;   Chorus. 


THOMAS  EUGENE  JONES 

EXCELLO,    O. 

"Tom." 
"Both  great  in  courage,  conduct,  and  in  fame." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Athletic  Association;  Sec- 
retary; Academy  Baseball  Squad  (3);  Academy  Baseball 
Team  (2),  Captain  (1);  Class  Day  Officers,  Second  Marshal; 
Senior  Council;  June  Ball  Officer,  President;  Yale  Club, 
Vice-President;  Assembly  Club,  Vice-President;  Ohio  State 
Club;  Kappa  Delta  Pi;  The  Phillips  Exeter  Monthly,  Asso- 
ciate Editor,  Business  Manager. 


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ALBERT  COURTENAY  KALBFLEISCH,  JR. 

East  Orange,  N.  J. 
"Bert."     "Cobby." 
"  To  Jill  the  hour,  that  is  happiness." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Christian  Fraternity;    Deut- 
scher Verein;  New  Jersey  Club;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company 
A,  Signal  Corps;  Chorus  (2). 


66 


MANVILLE  KENDRICK 

Sheridan,  Wyo. 
"Ken." 
"  Your  music  charms,  as  doth  yourself." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Rifle  Club;    Western  Club; 
Harvard  Club;    Glee  Club;    Mandolin  Club;    Chorus;    Mili- 
tary Club;   Exeter  Battalion,  Corporal. 


DONALD  HAMILTON  KERR 

Boston,  Mass. 
"Don."     "Abie." 
"A  poet  soaring  in  the  high  region  of  his  fancies." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Lower  Middle  Class  Base- 
ball Team;  Upper  Middle  Class  Baseball  Team,  Captain  (1); 
All-Class  Baseball  Team  (2);  Battalion  Baseball,  D  Company, 
Captain;    Class  Day  Officers,  Poet;    Senior  Council;    Chris- 
tian Fraternity;    Harvard  Club;    Bay  State  Club;    Cercle 
Francais;    Kappa  Epsilon  Pi;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company 
D,  Corporal. 


CLARENCE  BROUG.HTON  KILMER,  JR. 

Saratoga  Springs,  N.  Y. 

"Dick."     "Kil." 

"He  has  common  sense  in  a  w/y  that's  uncommon." 

Entered    Upper    Middle   Year;     Academy   Track    Squad; 

Championship  Class  Baseball  Team;  Williams  Club;   Empire 

State  Club;  Cercle  Francais ;  Rifle  Club;  Christian  Fraternity ; 

Assembly  Club. 


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PHILIP  GRIFFIN  KIMBALL 

Malden,  Mass. 

"Phil."     "Kim." 

"Proclaim  that  I  can  sing." 

Entered    Senior   Year;     Manager    Academy    Golf    Team; 

Senior   Class   Executive   Committee;    Christian   Fraternity; 

Bay   State   Club;     Dartmouth    Club;    Kappa    Epsilon    Pi; 

Glee  Club;   Chapel  Choir;   Chorus;  Academy  Quartette. 


LEWIS  WALLACE  KNOWLE5 
Milfoiu),  N.  Y. 

"Joe." 
"Marked  by  his  great  knowledge  of  military  affairs." 
Entered  Senior  Year;    Senior  Class  Football;    Exeter  Bat- 
talion, Quartermaster  Sergeant,  First  Lieutenant,  Adjutant, 
Second  Lieutenant,  Company  B;   Rifle  Club;   Western  Club; 
Golden  Branch  Literary  Society. 


LEONARD  BENTLEY  LAIRD 

NORTHFIELD,    MASS. 

"Fish."  "Nig." 
"Witty,  courteous,  liberal,  full  of  spirit." 
Entered  Junior  Year;  Academy  Track  Squad;  Senior  Class 
Football  Team;  Class  Baseball  Team  (3);  Captain  (1);  All- 
Class  Baseball  Team  (2);  Senior  Class  Track  Team;  Senior 
Class  Pin  Committee;  Christian  Fraternity;  Four-Year 
Club;  Kappa  Epsilon  Pi;  Glee  Club  (2);  Chapel  Choir  (3); 
Honor  Man,  First  Group  (2);  Honor  Man,  Second  Group 
(6);   Honorable  Mention  (6). 


68 


ARNOLD  PRESTON  LANG 

Larchmont  Manor,  N.  Y. 

"A.  P."     "Ape."     "Langie." 

"The  glory  of  a  young  man  is  his  strength." 

Entered  Llpper  Middle  Year;  Academy  Gymnasium  Squad; 

Class  Football  Team;   Class  Hockey  Team  (2);   Class  Track 

Team;  Manager  Class  Hockey  Team;  Harvard  Club;  Empire 

State    Club;     Christian    Fraternity;     Rifle    Club;     Golden 

Branch  Literary  Society;  Cercle  Francais;  Exeter  Battalion ; 

Honorable  Mention. 


HENRY  PALMER  LATHAM 

Willimantic,  Conn. 
"Puck." 
"  The  very  pink  of  courtesy." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Track  Squad;    Crew  Squad; 
Exeter  Battalion;    Tech.  Club;  Christian  Fraternity ;  Church 
Monitor. 


RAYMOND  ALBERT  LAUB 

Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

"Ray." 

" The  common  welfare  was  my  business." 

Entered    Senior    Year;     Christian    Fraternity;     Harvard 

Club;    Empire  State  Club;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B, 

Sergeant. 


69 


JAMES  KENT  LENAHAN 
Wilkes-Barre,  Pa. 
"Jim. " 
"  Well,  have  you  argued,  sir." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Lower  Middle  Class  Foot- 
ball   Team,    Captain;     All-Class    Football   Team    (Second) 
Golden  Branch  Literary  Society,  Vice-President,    President 
Inter-Society  Debating    Team,  Captain;    Penn  State  Club 
Yale  Club;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D. 


DONOLD  BRADFORD  LOURIE 

Peru,  III. 

"Don. 

"Foremost  captain  of  his  time." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Athletic  Association  (2), 
President;  Academy  Football  Team  (2),  Captain  (1);  Acad- 
emy Track  Team  (2);  Championship  Class  Track  Team  (2); 
Class  Relay  Team;  B.  A.  A.  Interscholastic  Team;  Senior 
Class  President;  Class  Day  Officer,  President;  June  Ball 
Officer;  Senior  Council,  President;  Upper  Middle  Class, 
President;  Christian  Fraternity,  Cabinet;  Princeton  Club, 
President;  Kappa  Epsilon  Pi. 


GEORGE  HUTCHINSON  LOVE 
Johnstown,  Pa. 
"Cupe."     "George." 
"With,  all  good  graces  to  grace  a  gentleman." 
Entered    Junior    Year;     Athletic    Association;     Academy 
Track    Team,    Assistant    Manager,    Manager;     Class    Drill 
Squad;    Class  Tennis  Team,  Captain;    Class  Baseball  Team; 
Class  Howling  Team;  Class  Hockey  Team,  Manager;  Cham- 
pionship Class  Track  Team,  Manager;  Senior  Class,  Secretary- 
Treasurer;     Senior    Council    (Resigned);    June  Ball  Officer; 
Senior   Class    Memorial    Committee;     Christian   Fraternity; 
Cornell   Club,  Secretary -Treasurer  (I),  President   (1);    Penn 
State  Club,  Vice-President  (1),  President  (1);  Four-Year  Club, 
President;    Princeton  Club;    Phi  Epsilon  Sigma;  The  Exon- 
iau,  Associate  Editor,  Secretary,   Managing  Editor;     Hon- 
orable Mention. 


70 


LELAND  ORNELL  LUDWIG,  JR. 

Houlton,  Me. 

"Lud."     "Luddy." 

"He  was  the  friend,  not  of  fortune,  but  of  nun." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   I  rpper  Middle  Baseball  Team; 

Company  Baseball  Team;    Rifle  Club;    Cornell  Club;    Maine 

Club;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company  t>;    Honor  Man,  Second 

group  (1) 


ANDREW  MARSHALL,  2ND 

New   London,  Conn. 

"Andy."      "Marsh." 

"  //<   is  complete  in  feature  and  in  mind." 

Entered  Senior  Year;    Christian   Fraternity;     Dartmouth 

Club;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B;  Honorable  Men  lion  (1). 


LEONARD  BRIGGS  MARSHALL 

Tehre  Haute,  Ind. 

"Len."     "Jack."      "Marsh." 

"My  learning  is  play,  and  my  play  is  learning." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;   Tennis  Squad  (2);   Christian 

Fraternity;    Deutscher  Verein;    Rifle  Club;    Assembly  Club; 

Honor  Man,  First   Group  (7),  Second  Group  (2);    Honorable 

Mention    (9);     Cum    Laude    Society;     Prentiss    Cummings 

Creek  Prize  (Second);  Chapel  Monitor. 


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JAMES  LENDO  MARSTON 

North  Hampton,  N.  H. 

"Jim." 

"Gentle  of  speech,  beneficent  of  mind." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Academy  Golf  Team   (1); 

Honorable  Mention  (3). 


WALLACE  EUGENE  McCAW,  JR. 
Cincinnati,  O. 
"Mac." 
"  The  mirror  of  all  courtesy." 
Entered   Junior  Year;    Crew  Squad    (3);    Track   Squad; 
Tech.   Club,  President;    Ohio   State  Club,  Secretary;   Hon- 
orable Mention;  Alpha  Nu;   Chapel  Monitor. 


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Princeton,  N.  J 

"Dean."     "Johnny."     "Mac."     "Irish." 

"Sagacious,  bold,  and  turbulent  of  wit." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Class  Baseball  Squad  (2); 

Championship  Class  Baseball  Team;    Class  Football  Squad 

(2);     Class   Football   Team;     Class   Hockey   Team;    Senior 

Hockey  Team,   Manager;    Christian  Fraternity    (3);      New 

Jersey  Club  (3);    Princeton  Club  (3);    Assembly  Club;    Rifle 

Club;    Kappa  Epsilon  Pi;    Golden  Branch  Literary  Society; 

Chorus;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D. 


72 


JOHN  BUNKER  MENDONCA 

Nantucket,  Mass. 

"Jack."     "Menie." 

"  Thou  art  wise,  'tis  certain." 

Entered   Upper   Middle  Year;    Track   Squad; '  Christian 

Fraternity;    Harvard  Club;    Bay  State  Club;    Cast    "Julius 

Caesar;"    Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D;    Honor  Man,  First 

Group    (1);     Honor    Man,    Second    Group    (2);     Honorable 

Mention  (7) ;   Church  Monitor. 


JOHN  DOUGLAS  MITCHELL 
Providence,  R.  I. 
"Johnny."     "Mitch." 
"The  world  honors  the  soldiers." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;   Christian  Fraternity;   Tech. 
Club;    Vaudeville  Show,  Fall,  1917;    Cast,  "The  American 
Lord;"  Exeter  Battalion,  Company  A,   Corporal,   Sergeant, 
First  Sergeant,  Second  Lieutenant,  First  Lieutenant;  Honor- 
able Mention  (1). 


LAWRENCE  EVERETT  MULLOY 

Waltham,  Mass. 

"Lawnie. " 

"Stubborn  labor  conquers  all  things." 

Entered  Senior  Year;    Senior  Football  Team;    All-Class 

Football  Team;   Senior  Hockey  Team;   Gym.  Leader;  Tech. 

Club;  Bay  State  Club. 


73 


JOSHUA  ATKINS  NICKERSON,  2ND 

Chatham,  Mass. 

"Josh."     "Nick." 

"  Virtue  is  its  own  reward." 

Entered    Upper    Middle   Year;     Crew    Squad;     Christian 

Fraternity;  Harvard  Club;   Bay  State  Club;   Golden  Branch 

Literary  Society. 


THOMAS  OXNARD 

Savannah,  Ga. 
"Tommy."     "Scoop." 
"Right  noble  is  thy  merit." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Academy  Crew,  Assistant 
Manager,  Manager  (Resigned);  Class  Day  Officer,  Valedic- 
torian (Resigned);   Class  Bowling  Team  (2);  Champion  Class 
Bowling   Team    (1);      Kappa   Epsilon    Pi;     Harvard    Club; 
Southern  Club;  The  Exoniau,  Associate  Editor;   Honor  Man, 
First  Group  (1);   Honor  Man,  Second  Group  (2);   Honorable 
Mention  (4). 


CARL  FREDERICK  PETERS 

Toronto,  Can. 

"Pete."     "Fat." 

"It  is  excellent  to  have  a  giant's  strength." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Football  Squad;    Academy 

Football  Team;     Track  Team,  Assistant  Manager;  Academy 

Tennis   Team,    Manager   (Resigned);   Track   Squad;    Senior 

Class,    Executive    Committee;     Harvard    Club;     Christian 

Fraternity;    Rifle  Club;    Fencing  Club,  Secretary-Treasurer; 

Assembly  Club;   Kappa  Delta  Pi. 


74 


JOHN  COLEMAN  PICKARD 

Wilmington,  Del. 

"Jack."     "Pick." 

"  The  mildest  manners  and  the  gentlest  heart." 

Entered  Senior  Year;   Company  Football  Team;   Golden 

Branch  Literary  Society;   Christian  Fraternity;   Maine  Club; 

Southern  Club;    Rifle  Club;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B; 

Honorable  Mention  (1). 


william  McDonnell  pond 

TORRINGTON,    CONN. 

"Billy."  "Ivers."  "Pondy." 
"He  from  whose  lips  divine  persuasion  flows." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Musical  Clubs;  Orchestra; 
Christian  Fraternity,  Cabinet,  Vice-President  (Resigned); 
Cast,  "Sherlock  Holmes,"  "The  American  Lord,"  "Julius 
Caesar; "  G.  L.  Soule  Literary  Society;  Inter  Society  Debating 
Team,  Captain;  Honor  Man,  First  Group;  Honor  Man, 
Second  Group  (3);  Honorable  Mention  (2);  Merrill  Declama- 
tion Prize  (First);  Merrill  Composition  Prize  (Second); 
Beattie-Murchie  Modern  History  Prize. 


HAROLD  CLARKE  RANDALL 

Rocky  Ford,  Col. 

"Rand."     "Hal." 

"For  I  am  armed  so  strong  in  honesty." 

Entered   Upper   Middle   Year;     Rifle   Club;    Yale   Club; 

Christian    Fraternity;     Western    Club;     Exeter    Battalion, 

Company  A;    Honor  Man,  Second  Group   (2);    Honorable 

Mention. 


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75 


RONALD  JOSEPH  RICHARDSON  REEDER 
Carthage,  N.  Y. 
"Dick."     "Rich." 
"And  what  he  greatly  thought  he  nobly  did." 
Entered  Senior  Year;   Senior  Class  Football  Team;    Chris- 
tian Fraternity;    Empire  State  Club;    Assembly  Club;    Cor- 
nell Club;    Exeter    Battalion,  Ordnance   Sergeant;    Chorus; 
Honorable  Mention  (1). 


ROSCOE  GILES  REEDER 

Carthage,  N.  Y. 

"Babe." 

"Virtue  is  bold,  and  goodness  never  fearful." 

Entered   Senior  Year;    Senior  Class  Football  Team;    All 

Class    Football    Team ;     Senior    Hockey    Team ;     Christian 

Fraternity;    Cornell  Club;    Empire  State  Club;    Assembly 

Club;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D;   Chorus;   Honor  Man, 

Second  Group4(l);   Honorable  Mention^(l). 


GORDON  RENNER 

Cincinnati,  0. 

"  Thy  music  hath  its  charms. " 

Entered    Senior    Year;     Christian    Fraternity;     Harvard 

Club;    Buckeye  State  Club;    Western  Club;    Golden  Branch 

Literary  Society;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B,  Corporal; 

Glee  Club;   Chorus;  Mandolin  Club. 


76 


HARRY  EDWARD  RICE,  JR. 

Vicksburg,  Miss. 

"Ricey." 

"A  man  destined  to  overcome." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Upper  Middle  Class  Bowling 

Team;   Senior  Class  Bowling  Team;   Yale  Club;    Rifle  Club; 

Southern  Club;    Golden  Branch  Literary  Society,  President; 

Exeter  Battalion,   Company  A;    Musical  Clubs;   Mandolin 

Club;  Honorable  Mention  (3). 


GRISWOLD  WOLCOTT  ROCHE 

Atlantic  Highlands,  N.  J. 
"Gris."     "Osie."     "Micky." 
"What  should  a  man  do  but  be  merry." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;     C  Company  Championship 
Football  Team;   Christian  Fraternity  (2);    New  Jersey  Club; 
YaleClub;  RifleClub;  CcrcleFrancais;  Vaudeville  Show,  Fall, 
1917;  Exeter  Battalion,  Corporal  ^Sergeant,  Company  A. 


STANTON  EDGAR  ROCKWELL 

Bridgeport,  Conn. 

"Stan."     "Rocky." 

"Diligence  is  the  mistress  of  success." 

Entered  Senior  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Yale  Club; 

Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D,  Corporal. 


77 


HOWARD  HENRY  ROTHSTEIN 

Johnstown,  Pa. 

"Ham."     "Howdy."     "Rose." 

"Nor  curb  his  swiftness  in  the 'forward  race." 

Entered  Senior  Year ;   Musical  Clubs;   Glee  Club;   Chorus; 

Vaudeville    Show,    Fall,    1917;     Penn  State  Club;    Cornell 

Club;  Rifle  Club. 


JOHN  JACOB  SACK 
New  York,  N.  Y. 
"Jack."      "Jake." 
"When  I  have  leisure,  I  amuse  myself  with  my  papers. " 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Senior  Class  Memorial  Com- 
mittee;     Christian    Fraternity,    Cabinet;     Harvard    Club; 
Empire    State    Club;     Cast,    "Sherlock    Holmes,"    "Julius 
Caesar,"  Vaudeville  Show,  Fall,  1917;   Golden  Branch  Liter- 
ary Society,  Librarian,  Secretary;    Exeter  Battalion,  Com- 
pany  A,   Corporal;    The  Exonian,   Associate   Editor;    The 
Phillips  Exeter  Monthly,  Associate  Editor,  Managing  Editor, 
Editor-in-Chief;     The    1918   Pean,   Editor-in-Chief;     Honor 
Man,  First  Group  (4),  Second  Group  (1);    Honorable  Men- 
tion (16);    Cum  Laude  Society;    Merrill  Prize  Compositions, 
Honorable  Mention;   Pitts  Dufnold  English  Prize;   Nathaniel 
Gordon  Bible  Prize;   Westerfield  American  History  Prize. 


JOSEPH  FREEMAN  SCOTT 

PlTTSFIELD,    N.    H. 

"Scottie."     "Joe." 

"Honest  labor  bears  a  lovely  face." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Track  Squad;    Golf  Squad; 

Christian  Fraternity;   Granite  State  Club;   Exeter  Battalion, 

Company    C;     Chorus;     Honor    Man,    Second    Group    (3); 

Honorable  Mention  (2). 


78 


GEORGE  WILLIAM  SHELDON,  2ND 

Summit,  N.  J. 
"Fat."     "Cupe." 
"'Tis  not  wJiiit  man  does  which  exalts  him,  but  what  man  would 
he." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    New 
Jersey  Club;    Princeton  Club;   Cercle  Francais;    Exeter  Bat- 
talion, Company  A. 


GEORGE  WING  SISSON,  3RD 

Potsdam,  N.  Y. 

"Sis." 

"Give  me  some  music;  I  pant  for  music. " 

Entered  Senior  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;   Empire  State 

Club;  Cornell  Club;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B,  Corporal; 

Musical  Clubs;  Glee  Club;  Mandolin  Club;  Chorus ;l[Chapel 

Choir. 


WALTER  KNAPP  SLACK 
Saginaw,  Mich. 

"Walt." 

"He  was  a  generous  youth." 

Entered  Senior  Year;   Track  Squad;   Christian  Fraternity 

Western  Club;    Williams  Club ;   Vaudeville  Show,  Fall,  1917 

Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D,  Signal  Corps;   Musical  Clubs 

Chorus;  Mandolin  Club. 


79 


SHERWOOD  PERRY  SMEDLEY 
Willi amstown,  Mass. 

"Smed."  "Slier."  "Fuzzy." 
"Manners  make  the  man." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Track  Squad;  Upper 
Middle  Class  Hockey  Team;  Senior  Class  Hockey  Team, 
Captain;  Christian  Fraternity;  Williams  Club,  President; 
Bay  State  Club;  Phi  Epsilon  Sigma;  Exeter  Battalion, 
Company  B,  Supply  Sergeant,  Second  Lieutenant;  Church 
Monitor. 


EDWARD  STILSON,  JR. 
Cortland,  X.  Y. 

"Ed."     "Stils." 

"He  looks  the  whole  world  in  the  face." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Senior  Class  Football  Team, 

Captain;   All-Class  Football  Team;   Christian  Fraternity  (2); 

Empire  State  Club  (2);    Princeton  Club  (2);  Phi  Theta  Psi; 

Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B,   Lance  Corporal. 


EVERETT  WILSON  SWEEZY 

Englewood,  N.  J. 
"Ev."     "Cheezy."     "Skeezicks."     "Snook." 
"He  is  a  true  man  of  science." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Har- 
vard Club;   New  Jersey  Club;   Property  Manager,  "Sherlock 
Holmes;"   Tech.  Club;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B,  Wire- 
less Sergeant,  Second  Lieutenant,  First  Lieutenant,  Captain, 
Adjutant;  Signal  Corps,  Sergeant;   Honor  Man,  First  Group 
(4);    Honorable   Mention   (.5);  Cum  Laude  Society;    Henry 
Judson  Hooper  Memorial  Prize. 


80 


JESSE  GILBERT  SWIFT,  JR. 

North  Scituate,  Mass. 

"Dean."     "Swifty."     "Gil." 

"For  I  can  sing  and  .speak." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Christian  Fraternity,  Cabinet; 

Harvard   Club;     Bay   State   Club;     Cast,    "Julius   Caesar;" 

Golden    Branch    Literary   Society,    Vice-President;      Exeter 

Battalion,    Company    A,    Corporal;     Glee    Club;     Church 

Monitor. 


THOMAS  MADISON  TAYLOR 

San  Antonio,  Tex. 

"Matt,"     "Happy."     "Texas." 

"He  served  with  glory  and  success." 

Entered   Lower   Middle  Year;    Academy    Hockey  Team, 

Manager;    P.  E.  A.  Police;    Senior  Council,  Vice-President; 

June   Ball   Officer;     Class   Day   Officers,   Secretary;     Upper 

Middle    Class,    Secretary-Treasurer;     Christian    Fraternity; 

Lone  Stai  State  Club,  Secretary-Treasurer;    Southern  Club, 

Secretary-Treasurer;       Rifle     Club;     Tech.     Club;      Cercle 

Fran^ais;   Assembly  Club;   Phi  Theta  Psi;   Exeter  Battalion, 

Company    D,    Corporal,    Second    Lieutenant;      Honorable 

Mention  (4). 


JAMES  HENDRICK  TERRY 

New  York,  N.  Y. 
"J.  H."     "Curley,"     "Hendy." 
"He  likes  to  study  the  love  that  lies  in  a  maiden's  eyes,  and  lies 
and  lies,  and  lies." 
Entered   Lower  Middle  Year;    Class  Hockey  Team    (2); 
Class  Baseball  Team;    Christian  Fraternity,  Cabinet,  Presi- 
dent;   Williams  Club;    Empire  State  Club;    Assembly  Club; 
Cercle  Francais;    Cast,  "Sherlock  Holmes,"  "The  American 
Lord,"  Vaudeville  Show,  Winter,  1916;    G.  L.  Soule  Literary 
Society,    Vice-President;     Exeter    Battalion,    Company    D, 
Corporal;     Glee   Club    (2);     Chorus    (2);    The    1918   Pean, 
Associate  Editor;    Honor  Man,  Second  Group  (2);    Honor- 
able   Mention    (2);     Merrill    Declamation    Prize     (Second); 
Church  Monitor. 


81 


BRYANT  FRANKLIN  TOLLES 

Hartford,  Conn. 

"Tuds."     "Jim." 

"This  gentleman  who  achieves  honors." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Track  Squad   (2);    Senior 

Class  Championship  Track  Team;    Christian  Fraternity  (2); 

Yale  Club  (2);    Phi  Theta  Psi;   G.  L.  Soule  Literary  Society, 

President,  Secretary;  Exeter  Battalion,  Junior  Color  Corporal, 

Company    A;     (dee    Club;    Chorus    (2);     The    1918    Pean, 

Assistant  Business  Manager. 


JOHN  BAKER  WADSWORTH 
Council  Bluffs,  Ia. 

"Wadsy."     "Wady." 
"A  merry  heart  goes  all  the  day." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Track  Squad;    Goll'  Squad; 
Cercle    Francais;      Western     Club;      Christian     Fraternity; 
Harvard  Club;    Deutscher  Verein;    Exeter  Battalion,  Com- 
pany A;  Musical  Clubs;  Orchestra  (2). 


WILLIAM  HENRY  WALLACE 

South  Orange,  N.  J. 
"Bill." 
"With  tlie  swiftest  wing  of  speed." 
Entered  Senior  Year;   Senior  Class  Football  Team;   Tracl 
Squad;   Chorus. 


82 


JOHN  WHEELER  WATKINS 

Utica,  N.  Y. 
"Jack."     "Wat." 
"Needs  not  the  painted  flourish  of  our  praise." 
Entered  Senior  Year;   Christian  Fraternity;   Empire  State 
Club;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B,    Corporal;    Mandolin 
Club;  Chorus. 


CLIFTON  EDWIN  WATSON 

Leicester,  Mass. 
"Clif." 
"Swifter  than  arrow  from  the  Tartar's  bow." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Academy  Second  Football 
Team;  Academy  Football  Team;  Championship  Class  Track 
Team  (2),  Captain  (1);    Class  Relay  Team  (2),  Captain  (1); 
B.  A.  A.  Interscholastic  Track  Team;  Academy  Indoor  Relay 
Team    (2);     Academy    Track    Team    (2);     Senior    Council; 
Senior    Class    Picture  Committee;    June  Ball  Officer,  Vice- 
President;  Harvard  Club  (2),  President  (1);   Bay  State  Club 
(2),   Vice-President    (1);     Kappa   Epsilon    Pi;     Chorus    (2); 
Glee  Club  (2);  Chapel  Choir;  Athletic  Association. 


JAMES  MICHAELS  WEIL 

Rochester,   N.  Y. 

"  Jim." 

"A  good  heart  and  a  level  head." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Harvard  Club;  Empire  State 

Club;     Cercle    Francais;     Exeter    Battalion,    Company    A; 

Honor   Man,   Second   Group    (.5);    Honorable   Mention   (6); 

Henry  L.  Mason  Latin  Prize;  Cum  Laude  Society. 


83 


JOHN  ROGERS  WESTERFIELD 

MoNTCLAIR,    N.    J. 

"Jack." 
"Nothing  is  iin]>ossible  to  a  valiant  heart." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Athletic  Association  (2); 
Academy  Football  Team,  Assistant  Manager,  Manager; 
Track  Squad;  Senior  Class  Executive  Committee,  Chairman; 
Senior  Council,  Secretary  (Resigned);  June  Ball  Officer; 
Christian  Fraternity;  Assembly  Club,  President;  New 
Jersey  Club,  President;  Dartmouth  Club;  Alpha  Nu; 
Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D,  Sergeant. 


JOHN  WETTSTEIN 

Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y. 
"John."     "Wett."     "Chisel." 
"A  merry  heart  maketh  a  cheerful  countenance. " 
Entered  Junior  Year;    Track  Squad   (2);    Class  Football 
Team    (2);     Company    A    Football    Team,    Captain;     Golf 
Squad;    Class  Drill  Squad;    Yale  Club;    Empire  State  Club; 
Rifle    Club,    President;     Fencing    Club;     Four-Year    Club; 
Assembly  Club;    Christian  Fraternity;    Alpha  Nu;    Exeter 
Battalion,  Company  A,  Corporal,  Sergeant,  Second  Lieuten- 
ant. 


LEONARD  WHEELER,  JR. 

Worcester,  Mass. 
"Len."     "Endy." 
"A  careful  man,  and  a  great  scholar." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Har- 
vard Club;    Bay  State  Club;    Honor  Man,  First  Group  (5); 
Honorable  Mention  (13);  Cum  Laude  Society;  Greeley  Latin 
Prize    (First);     Mason    Latin    Prize    (Honorable    Mention); 
Sunday  Chapel  Monitor. 


ROBERT  LEWIS  WIEL 

San  Francisco,  Cal. 
"Billy."     "Bob." 
"What  stronger  breastplate  than  a  heart  untainted." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Golf 
Squad;  Cercle  Francais;  Harvard  Club;  Rifle  Club;  Western 
Club:    Cast,  "Sherlock  Holmes,"  Vaudeville  Show,  Winter, 
1916,  Vaudeville  Show,  Fall,  1917;   Exeter  Battalion,  Com- 
pany A. 


OTIS  PARKER  WILLIAMS 

Norwalk,  O. 

"Ote."     "Oppie."     "Bill."     "Will." 

"He  is  a  soldier  fit  to  stand  by  Ccesar. " 

Entered  Senior  Year;   C  Company  Championship  Football 

Team;   Senior  Class  Baseball  Manager;   Buckeye  State  Club, 

President;   Christian  Fraternity;   Rifle  Club;   Harvard  Club; 

Western  Club;    Cornell  Club;    Phi  Epsilon  Sigma;    Exeter 

Battalion,    Company   C,    First   Sergeant,    First    Lieutenant, 

Captain;   Chorus. 


JAMES  HOLTON  WILSON 

Columbus,  0. 

"Woodrow. "     "Jim." 

"Silent,  steadfast,  and  demure." 

Entered    Senior    Year;     Christian    Fraternity;    Buckeye 

State  Club;   Honorable  Mention. 


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85 


CHARLES  MacPHEE  WRIGHT 

Tucson,  Ariz. 

"Mac." 

"A  friend  is  worth  all  hazards  we  can  run." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Senior  Class  Football  Team; 

Christian  Fraternity;   Western  Club;   Harvard  Club;   Cerele 

Francais;   G.  L.  Soule  Literary  Society,  Librarian. 


FREDERIC  EMERSON  WRIGHT,  JR. 
Richmond  Hill,  N.  Y. 
"Ox."     "Colonel." 
"My  strength  is  as  the  strength  of  ten." 
Entered   Junior  Year;  Academy  Gym.    Team    (3),   Cap- 
tain  (1);    Football  Squad  (2);    Senior  Class  Football  Team; 
Crew  Squad  (3);    Lower  Middle  Class,  Secretary-Treasurer; 
Williams  Club,   President;    Fencing  Club,   Secretary-Treas- 
urer; Cerele  Francois;  Assembly  Club;  Empire  State  Club; 
Vaudeville  Show,  Winter,  1916,  Vaudeville  Show,  Fall,  1917; 
Phi  Theta  Psi;  G.  L.  Soule  Literary  Society;  Glee  Club  (2); 
Chorus  (4);    Nathaniel  Gordon  Prize  (First). 


Sometime  Members  of  the  Senior  Class 


Blish,  John  Lyman, 

Seymour,  Ind., 

H.  S 

409 

Bonnell,  Edward  Clarkson, 

Bay  Head,  N.  J., 

Mrs.  G. 

E.  Clough's 

542 

Crawford,  Lindsay, 

Summit,  N.  J., 

W.  29 

Garside,  Frank, 

New  Rochelle,  N.  Y., 

W.  B. 

Kenniston's 

471 

Lowe,  Wallace  Granville, 

Brookline,  Mass., 

S.  4 

503 

Merrill,  Abner  Scott, 

Brookline,  Mass., 

P.  15 

198 

Moses,  Gordon, 

Concord, 

P.  12 

398 

Pickering,  John  Robert  Holbrooke, 

Portsmouth, 

S.  17 

492 

Richards,  Homer  Flint, 

Arlington,  Mass., 

S.  23 

Vernon,  Ralph  Radley, 

Poquonock,  Conn., 

S.  22 

291 

Weldon,  John,  Jr., 

Williinantic ,  Conn. , 

H.  24 

Wilford,  George  Arthur,  Jr., 

Tamaqua,  Pa., 

S.  9 

417 

Sli 


College  Preferences 


Harvard  (48):  Berkeley,  Birtwell,  Bowen,  Buttrick,  Cole,  Colony,  Combs,  Curtis,  G.  E. 
Darling,  K.  C.  Darling,  Dow,  Eager,  Edmonds,  Felheim,  Hoagland,  C.  P.  Holmes,  M.  S.  Jones, 
Huddleston,  Kendrick,  Kerr,  A.  P.  Lang,  Laub,  Mendonca,  Nickerson,  C.  F.  Peters,  W.  M.  Pond, 
Renner,  Sack,  Scott,  Sweezy,  Swift,  Wadsworth,  Wakefield,  C.  E.  Watson,  Weil,  Wheeler,  Wiel, 
C.  M.  Wright,  Chapman,  H.  W.  Clark,  Conklin,  Durfee,  Eaton,  Laird,  Martindale,  Tait,  J.  R. 
Watson,  Wilcox. 

Yale  (23):  DeWolf,  Dietzel,  Draper,  J.  R.  Elliott,  Haskell,  Head,  R.  G.  Johnson,  T.  E.  Jones, 
Lenahan,  L.  B.  Marshall,  Randall,  Rice,  Roche,  Rockwell,  Tolles,  Wettstein,  Gates,  Hickey, 
Howard,  E.  L.  McCarty,  MacPherson,  A.  B.  Stoddard,  Sturm. 

Massachusetts  Institute  Technology  (19):  E.  C.  Clark,  Clement,  Erikson,  Flather,  Frost, 
Holland,  L.  B.  Laird,  Latham,  McCaw,  Mitchell,  Mulloy,  Taylor,  Bernard,  Dillon,  Gove,  Lock- 
wood,  Martin,  J.  W.  Poole,  Sweeney. 

Princeton  (18):  Bathgate,  Ballard,  Barwise,  Day,  Hudson,  C.  Johnson,  Lourie,  Love, 
McClenahan,  Sheldon,  Stilson,  Wallace,  Bean,  Carruth,  Howard,  Stabler,  Webster,  Wintringer. 

Cornell  (16):  Bacchus,  Calloway,  Grant,  Gutwillig,  R.  D.  Johnson,  Ludwig,  R.  G.  Reeder, 
R.  J.  R.  Reeder,  Rothstein,  Sisson,  Watkins,  Williams.  R.  H.  Jones,  Sanford,  H.  P.  Smith,  E.  Teel. 

Williams  (6):  Cobb,  Kilmer,  Slack,  Smedley,  Terry,  F.  E.  Wright. 

Dartmouth  (5):   P.  G.  Kimball,  A.  Marshall,  Westerfield,  Perkins,  Turnbull. 

University  of  Pennsylvania  (2):  Allison,  Gilmore. 

Boivdoin  (2):  G.  A.  Curran,  Pickard. 

Annapolis  (1):   Oxnard. 

Brown  (1):  Hurst. 

Columbia  (1):  Ohse. 

Ohio  State  University  (1):  J.  H.  Wilson. 

Stevens  Technology  (1):   Kalbfieisch. 

Virginia  Military  Academy  (1):   Shipley. 

West  Point  (l):  Shattuck. 

Worcester  Technology  (l):  Marston. 

No  preference  (11):  Conant,  DeVito,  Currie,  Damon,  Dearborn,  Gorby,  L.  W.  Knowles, 
Kleymeyer,  Lippincott,  Perry,  Vieth. 


87 


Lourie 


Holmes 


Love 


Senior  Class  Officers 

OFFICERS 

President D.  B.  Lourie 

Vice-President T.  W.  Bacchus,  Jr.,*  C.  P.  Holmes 

Secretary-Treasurer G.  H.  Love 

*Resigned 

Future  Occupations 

One  third  of  the  class  was  undecided  as  to  their  future  occupation.    This  was,  undoubtedly, 
due  to  the  war.    The  remainder  gave  their  occupations  in  the  Pean  Senior  class  ballot  as  follows: 

7  Lawyer  1  Woolen  business 

2  President  of  the  U.  S.  1  U.  S.  Senator 

2  Engineer  1  Trench-digger 

2  Civil  engineer  1  Soldier 

2  Mechanical  engineer  1  Fighting  Huns 

2  Business  1  Killing  Germans 

2  Farmer  1  Major  general 

2  Chemist  1  Pushing  up  daisies  in  France 

1  Electrical  engineer  1  Leader  of  a  Salvation  Army  band 

1  Banker  and  broker  1  Cabaret  dancer 

1  Doctor  1  Successor  to  Pop  Clark 

1  Physician  1  Conductor  on  Exeter  Street  car 

1  Surgeon  1  Bottle  washer 

1  Boiler  maker  1  Best  mining  engineer  in  world 

1  Fruit  dealer  1  Owner  of  a  dance  hall 

1  Broker  1  A  regular  business  man 

1  Bartender  1  Making  automatic  door  opener 

1  Prize  fighting  1  Instructor  in  an  institution  of  erudition 

1  Coal  business  1  Worm-hole  borer  in  an  antique  furniture  shop 

1  Armchair  athlete  1  Getting  done  with  as  little  work  as  possible 


Senior  Class  Ballot 


Second 


First  column  arranged  in  order  of  number  of  votes, 
turned  in  ballots. 

First 
Best  athlete  ....  *Lourie 
Most  popular  .  .  .  *Lourie 
Done  the  most  for 

Exeter *Lotjrie 

Best  all  round  man  *Lourie 
Busiest *S  \ck 


Seventy  per  cent,  of  Seniors  in  school 


Third 


Class  politician 

.    .   Eager 

Lenahan 

Man  of  the  hour 

.    .    Lourie 

T.  E.  Jones 

Class  grind    .    . 

.    .   Cole 

Wheeler 

Day 

Pluckiest    .    .    . 

Lourie 

T.  E.  Jones 

Pond 

Most  apt  to  succeed   Sack 

Hudson 

Best  speaker 

.   Lenahan 

Taylor 

fPOND,  fHUDDLESTON 

Most  loyal 

Lourie 

T.  E.  Jones 

Taylor 

Squarest    .    .    . 

.   Lourie 

T.  E.  Jones 

Pond 

Class  fiunker     . 

.   Wettstein 

Westerfield 

Lenahan 

Class  heathen   . 

.   Terry 

Pond 

Lenahan 

Class  baby    .    . 

.   Colony 

Curtis 

Wiel 

Class  giant    .    . 

.  Peters 

Eager 

Bacchus 

Class  bluffer 

.    .   Lenahan 

Eager 

Love 

Class  shark    .    . 

.fE)AY,  t  Wheeler 

Berkeley 

Sack 

Noisiest     .    .    . 

.   Wettstein 

Eager 

Gutwillig 

Wittiest     .    .    . 

Love 

Kimball 

Rothstein 

Class  cutter  .    . 

.    .   C.  Johnson 

Holmes 

Sportiest    .    .    . 

.    .   Love 

Rothstein 

R.  G.  Johnson 

Best  singer    .    . 

.    Laird 

Kimball 

Rothstein 

Most  talented  . 

.    .   Hurst 

Rothstein 

Sack 

Most  tactful 

.   Hurst 

Lourie 

fEAGER,    fHOLMES 

Handsomest 

.  fHoLMEs,f  R.G.Johnson  Love 

Hurst 

Best  natured     . 

.   Lourie 

Eager 

Taylor 

Least  appreciated 

.   Sack 

Eager 

Allison 

Quietest     .    .    . 

Bathgate 

Bacchus  . 

Colony 

Most  original     . 

.    .   Love     , 

Sack 

Rothstein 

Most  gentlemanly 

.  Hurst 

Bacchus 

Lourie 

Biggest  roughneck   .  Edmonds 

Eager 

Wettstein 

Best  dancer  .    . 

.  Westerfield 

Love 

fLoURIE,    fWATSON 

Class  highbrow 

.   Terry 

Curtis 

TOLLES 

Lady's  man  .    . 

.   Love 

R.  G.  Johnson 

Watson 

Nerviest     .    .    . 

Lang 

Hoagland 

R.  G.  Johnson 

Laziest   .... 

.   C.  Johnson 

Love 
Lenahan 

Wettstein 

Most  patriotic  . 

.   Barwise 

fOxNARD,    fTAYLOR 

Most  obliging   . 

.   Lourie 

T.  E.  Jones 

t Williams,  "[Taylor, -j-Hurst 

Optimist    .    .    . 

Eager 

Taylor 

fR.  G.  Johnson 

Woman  hater   . 

.  Cole 

fA.  Marshall,  fl 

Jacchus 

*Practically  unanimous.     fTied. 


89 


Cum  Laude  Society 


MEMBERS  IN  COURSE  FROM  THE  CLASS  OF  1917 


Lincoln  B.  Barker 
Samuel  B.  Chase,  Jr. 
Hung-chen  Chen 
Lawrence  W.  Conant 
John  Cowles 
Joseph  B.  Folger,  Jr. 
Warren  F.  Goodell 
Edward  B.  Jennings,  Jr 


Charles  M.  Kritzman 
Joseph  F.  Lautner 
Thomas  N.  Moir 
James  E.  Nallt 
Chester  D.  Perry 
Francis  T.  P.  Plimpton 
Emmett  J.  Scott,  Jr. 
Oliver  C.  Stamper 
Frederick  J.  Woodbridge 


MEMBERS-ELECT  FROM  THE  CLASS  OF  191S 

Cyrus  L.  Day 
Leonard  B.  Marshall 
John  J.  Sack 
Everett  W.  Sweezy 
Leonard  Wheeler,  Jr. 


FACULTY  MEMBERS 


Mr.  Earl  A.  Barrett 
Mr.  Otis  M.  Bigelow 
Mr.  S.  P.  R.  Chadwick 
Dr.  Charles  H.  Clark 
Mr.  Joseph  S.  Ford 
Professor  William  A.  Francis 
Professor  John  C.  Kirtland 
Dr.  Arthur  G.  Leacock 
Mr.  Frederick  J.  Libby 

Dr.  Alfred 


R. 


Dr.  Lewis  Perry 
Mr.  Fletcher  N.  Robinson 
Mr.  George  B.  Rogers 
Mr.  Howard  A.  Ross 
Mr.  Wilhelm  Segerblom 
Mr.  Howard  S.  Stuckey 
Mr.  Henry  L.  Sweet 
Professor  James  A.  Tufts 
Mr.  Frederick  R.  Whitman 
Wightman 


90 


Top  Row— Kerr,  C.  P.  Holmes,  Hurst,  Allison. 

Bottom  Row — C.  E.  Watson,  Taylor,  Lourie,  T.  E.  Jones,  R.  G.  Johnson. 

Senior  Council 

OFFICERS 

President Donold  B.  Lourie 

Vice-President Thomas  M.  Taylor 

Secretary-Treasurer John  R.  Westerfield,*  Thomas  E.  Jones 

MEMBERS 

Chester  P.  Allison  Thomas  E.  Jones 

Thomas  W.  Bacchus,  Jr.*  Donald  H.  Kerr 

Gordon  P.  Eager  Donold  B.  Lourie 

Charles  P.  Holmes  George  H.  Love* 

Arthur  L.  Hurst  Thomas  M.  Taylor 

Robert  G.  Johnson  Clifton  E.  Watson 
John  R.  Westerfield* 
*Resigned 


91 


Top  Row — Kerr,  Eager,  Hurst,  Day 

Bottom  Row—C  P.  Holmes,  Taylor,  Lourie,  Lenahan,  T.  E.  Jones. 


Class  Day  Officers 

President .' D.  B.  Lotjrie 

Secretary T.  M.  Taylor 

Orator J.  K.  Lenahan,*  W.  McD.  Pond 

Historian A.  L.  Hurst 

Prophet G.  P.  Eager 

Poet D.  H.  Kerr 

Marshals C.  P.  Holmes,  T.  E.  Jones 

Valedictorian Thomas  Oxnard,*  C.  L.  Day 

*Resigned 

Executive  Committee.- — J.  R.  Westerfield,  Chairman;  C.  H.  Huddleston,  P.  G.  Kimball, 
C.  F.  Peters. 

Cap  and  Gown  Committee. — R.  D.  Hudson,  Chairman;  Roger  Birtwell,  E.  C.  Clark. 
Pin  Committee. — R.  D.  Hudson,  Chairman;  R.  D.  Johnson,  L.  B.  Laird. 
Picture  Committee. — C.  H.  Huddleston,  Chairman;  S.  B.  Damon,  C.  E.  Watson. 
Memorial  Committee. — A.  L.  Hurst,  Chairman;  G.  H.  Love,  J.  J.  Sack. 


92 


Top  Row— J.  W.  Laird,  Wettstein.  Judson,  C.  P.  Holmes,  F.  E.  Wright,  Dow,  Clifford. 

Bottom  Row — Hoagland,  Edmonds,  R.  G.  Johnson,  Love,  Hudson,  Birtwell,  Allison,  L.  B.  Laird. 

Four  Year  Club 

OFFICERS 

President G.  H.  Love 

Vice-President R,  G.  Johnson 

Secretary-Treasurer ' R.  D.   Hudson 

MEMBERS 

C.  P.  Allison  R.  P.  Hoagland,  Jr.  L.  B.  Laird 

R.  Birtwell  C.  P.  Holmes  G.  H.  Love 

J.  P.  Clifford  R.  L.  Holt  C.  M.  Mayo 

A.  G.  Cooper  R.  D.  Hudson  A.  A.  Shepard 

E.  L.  Dearborn  R.  D.  Johnson  M.  B.  Smith 

W.  G.  Dow  R.  G.  Johnson  K.  J.  Tilton 

C.  F.  Eaton,  Jr.  C.  F.  Judson,  Jr.  J.  Wettstein 

T.  S.  Edmonds  J.  W.  Laird  F.  E.  Wright,  Jr. 


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93 


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miMM  HISTORY 


CLASS  of  1919,  yours  is  no  mean  task  for  the  coming  year.  The  old  order  changes  and  gives 
place  to  new.  The  war  will  make  the  school  life  next  year  somewhat  different  from  that  of 
this  year  or  previous  years.  You  will  have  to  meet  new  and  serious  problems.  Rather  than 
give  this  valuable  space  to  reviling,  lambasting  and  stepping  all  over  you,  as  has  been  the  custom, 
we  prefer  to  warn  and  advise  you.  The  tide  of  battle  may  ebb  and  flow,  but  you  must  keep  your 
heads  with  you,  stick  to  your  places,  getting  ready  for  the  moment  your  country  calls  you,  and  like 
good  soldiers  obeying  the  orders  you  have  received  to  prepare  yourselves  for  that  moment.  We 
Seniors,  soon  to  be  members  of  Exeter's  loyal  body  of  alumni,  will  with  all  alumni  be  listening  for 
news  of  you,  nor  will  we  be  satisfied  unless  we  learn  that  you  have  realized  your  duty  to  the 
country,  have  given  unselfishly  of  your  money  to  every  cause  that  asks  it,  have  given  unstintingly 
of  your  time  and  labor  where  it  is  needed,  have  given  nobly  of  yourselves  when  the  call  is  made. 
May  you  leave  Exeter  in  June,  1919,  with  her  traditions  strengthened,  her  ideals  maintained,  and 
yourselves  from  a  year  of  duty  and  sacrifice  ennobled. 


95 


RALPH  LYON  BEAN 
Lebanon,  N.  H. 
"Bud."     "Beanie."     "Baron." 
"Good  humor  and  generosity  carry  the  day,  all  the  world  over." 
Entered   Junior  Year;    Class   Hockey   Team    (2);    Lower 
Middle    Class    Hockey     Team,     Manager;      Championship 
Class  Drill  Squad;    Class  Baseball  (3);    Class  Football   (2); 
Championship  Football  Team  (2);    All  Class  Football  Team 
(1);     Class    Bowling    (3);     Lower    Middle    Bowling    Team, 
Captain;      Christian    Fraternity;     Tech.    Club,    Secretary- 
Treasurer;   Granite  State  Club;   Cercle  Francais;   Rifle  Club; 
Exeter  Battalion,  Company  C,  Corporal;    Vaudeville  Show 
Winter,  1916;   Honorable  Mention  (2). 


KENNETH  BERNARD 

Revere,  Mass. 

"Barney. " 

"He  that  goes  sbflly  goes  safely." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;   Track   Squad;   Crew  Squad; 

Tech.  Club;   Christian  Fraternity;    Bay  State  Club;  Exeter 

Battalion,  Company  C;   Chorus. 


EDWARD  BENNETT  CARRUTH,  JR. 

San  Antonio,  Tex, 

"Ed." 

"Good  fellowship    ami   company    he   ilalh    maintain    ami   keep 

always.  " 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Academy  Golf  Team  (2); 
Upper  Middle  Class  Baseball  Team,  Manager;  Southern 
Club;  Christian  Fraternity;  Texas  Club;  Princeton  Club; 
Phi  Theta  Psi;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company  I). 


96 


HENRY  OTIS  CHAPMAN,  JR. 

WOODMERE,    N.    Y. 

"Chappie." 
"  Arrows  fled  not  swifter  to  their  mark." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Academy  Track  Team  (2); 
Academy  Indoor  Relay  Team;  Pennsylvania  Relay  Team; 
B.  A.  A.  Interscholastic  Track  Team;  Class  Track  Team 
(2);  Christian  Fraternity;  Harvard  Club;  Empire  State 
Club;  Cercle  Francais;  Rifle  Club;  Phi  Theta  Psi;  G.  L. 
Soule  Literary  Society,  Vice-President,  President;  Exeter 
Battalion,  Company  B,  Corporal,  Sergeant;  Chorus  (2). 


HENRY  WADSWORTH  CLARK 

Ketchikan,  Alaska. 

"Eskie. "     "Nig."     "Hank." 

"He  was  exceeding  strong." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Academy   Football  Team; 

Track  Squad;  Christian  Fraternity;  Western  Club;  Harvard 

Club;    Cercle  Francais;    Kappa  Epsilon  Pi;    Golden  Branch 

Literary  Society. 


THOMAS  ROSCOE  CONKLIN 

Aurora,  III. 

"Tommy. "     "Conk. " 

"Enthusiasm  is  the  breath  of  genius. " 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company 

D,  Corporal;   Harvard  Club;   Western  Club. 


97 


WALTER  STANLEY  CURRIE 

West  Somerville,  Maws. 
"Walt,"     "Wallie." 
"Men  of  few  words  are  the  wisest  men." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity; 
State  Club;  Princeton  Club ;  Harvard  Club;  Chorus. 


Bay 


FREDERICK  NATHAN  DILLON,  JR. 

Fitchburg,  Mass. 
"Fred."     "Dill." 
"His  heart  was  in  his  work." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Upper  Middle  Class  Football 
Team;  Hockey  Squad;  Class  Hockey  Team  (3),  Captain  (1); 
Crew    Squad;     Bay    State    Club;     Tech.    Club,    Secretary- 
Treasurer;  Rifle  Club;   Mandolin  Club.  » 


BRADFORD  CHALONER  DURFEE 

Fall  River,  Mass. 

"Brad."       "Durf."       "Blondy."       "Swede."       "Fritters." 

"Whitey." 

"He  scatters  enjoyment  who  can  enjoy  much." 

Entered    Lower   Middle    Year;     Crew    Squad    (3);     Class 

Hockey  Team;    Class  Baseball  Team;    Harvard  Club;    Bay 

State  Club;  Christian  Fraternity;  Kappa  Epsilon  l'i. 


98 


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CHARLES  FREEDOM  EATON,  JR. 

Princeton,  Me. 
"Charlie." 
"  You  were  bom  to  success  and  you  will  achieve  it." 
Entered  Junior  Year;   Athletic  Association,  Auditing  Com- 
mittee;   Crew    Squad   (4);    Academy  Crew   (2);    P.   E.  A. 
Police    (2);    Junior  Class,  President;    Lower  Middle  Class, 
President;      Upper     Middle     Class,    President     (Resigned); 
Christian  Fraternity,  Class  Cabinet;    Harvard  Club;    Pine 
Tree  State  Club,  President  (2);   Cercle  Francais;   Rifle  Club; 
P.  E.  A.  Crew  Association;    Phi  Epsilon  Sigma;   G.  L.  Soule 
Literary  Society;    Exeter  Battalion,   Quartermaster   Corps, 
Second   Lieutenant;    Academy   Chorus    (2);   Chapel   Choir; 
Assembly  Club;    Cheer  Leader,  Head  Cheer  Leader;  Honor- 
able Mention. 


CHARLES  GORDON  GATES 

Rodman,  N.  Y. 

"Charley."     "Gordon."     "Dick." 

"Labor  overcometh  all  things." 

Entered  Junior  Year;   Junior  Class  Baseball  Team;   Lower 

Middle  Class  Bowling  Team;    Class  Football  Squad;    Track 

Squad;     Christian    Fraternity;     Empire   State    Club;     Yale 

Club;    Rifle  Club;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company  C,  Corporal; 

Honorable  Mention  (4). 


KENNETH  LeROY  GOVE 

Haverhill,  Mass. 
"Kenny."     "Shorty." 
"He  that  knoics  is  strong." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Championship  Class  Bowl- 
ing  Team;    Christian  Fraternity;    Tech.  Club;     Bay   State 
Club;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D,  Corporal;   Honor  Man, 
Second  Group  (2);  Honorable  Mention  (2). 


99 


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DORR  SWEET  HICKEY 

MlLFORD,    N.    Y. 

"Hick." 

"'Mid  pleasures  and  palaces,  there  is  no  place  like  home." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Academy  Football  Team; 
Academy  Baseball  Squad;  Championship  Upper  Middle 
Class  Bowling  Team,  Manager;  June  Ball  Officer,  Secretary- 
Treasurer;  Christian  Fraternity;  Empire  State  Club;  Yale 
Club;  Vaudeville  Show,  Winter,  1916;  Kappa  Delta  Pi; 
Honorable  Mention. 


GEORGE  ADAMS  HOWARD 

Washington,  D.  C. 

"Howie."     "George." 

"Do  well  the  duty  that  lies  before  you." 

Entered   Junior  Year;    Princeton   Club;    Southern   Club; 

Christian  Fraternity;   Exeter  Battalion. 


WILLIAM  CARROLL  HANDLAN  HOWARD 

Wheeling,  W.  Va. 

"Bill." 
"Why,  then,  the  world's  mine  oyster,  which  I  with  sword  ivill 

open. " 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Track  Squad;  Company 
Football  Team;  Southern  Club;  Yale  Club;  Vaudeville 
Show,  Fall,  1917;  Golden  Branch  Literary  Society;  Musical 
Clubs  (2);  Mandolin  Club  (2);  Exeter  Battalion,  Company 
D,  Sergeant,  Top-Sergeant,  Second  Lieutenant,  First  Lieu- 
tenant, Captain. 


100 


ROBERT  HOWARD  JONES 
Dayton,  0. 
"Bob."     "Buddie." 
"In  thy  face  I  see  a,  gentleman" 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;   Lower  Middle  Class  Football 
Team  (2),  Manager;  Second  All-Class  Football  Team ;   Class 
Bowling  Team,  Captain,   Manager;    Yale  Club,  Secretary- 
Treasurer;    Buckeye  State  Club,  Vice-President;    Christian 
Fraternity;    Western  Club;    Rifle  Club;    Phi  Epsilon  Sigma; 
Exeter  Battalion,  Company  C. 


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RALPH  THEODORE  KLEYMEYER 

EVANSVILLE,    IND. 

"Ted." 

"  He  doeth  much  that  doeth  a  thing  well." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Company  A  Football  Team; 

Christian    Fraternity;     Golden    Branch    Literary     Society; 

Exeter   Battalion,  Company  A,   Corporal;    Exeter  Officers' 

Training  Camp;   Chorus. 


JOHN  WELLINGTON  LAIRD 

Brockton,  Mass. 

"Jack."     "Duke."     "J." 

"He  is  music's  master." 

Entered  Junior  Year;    Harvard  Club;    Bay  State  Club; 

Four-Year    Club;     Cercle   Francais;     Christian    Fraternity; 

Assembly  Club;   Exeter  Battalion,  Sergeant;    Musical  Clubs, 

Vice-President;    Glee  Club;    Academy  Quartette;    Orchestra 

(4),  Leader;   Chapel  Choir;   Chorus  (3). 


101 


MORSS  d'ISAY  LIPPINCOTT 

Cincinnati,  0. 

"Lipp." 

"Great  urns  the  force  of  his  eloquence." 

Entered     Upper     Middle     Year;      Christian     Fraternity; 

Western  Club;    Harvard  Club;    Ohio  Club;    Golden  Branch 

Literary   Society;     Exeter   Battalion,   Company   B;     Honor 

Man,  Second  Group  (1);   Honorable  Mention  (3). 


JOSEPH  ELLISON  LOCKWOOD 

Old  Town,  Me. 
"Joe." 
"Patient  persistent  effort  is  often  the  price  of  success." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Maine  Club;    Tech.  Club; 
Exeter  Battalion;   Honor  Man,  Second  Group. 


EDMUND  HEWITT  MacPHERSON 

Bridgeton,  N.  J. 
"Mac." 
"Valiant,  wise,  and  well-accom.panied." 
Entered  Upper  MiddleYear;  Yale  Club;   New  Jersey  Club; 
Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B. 


102 


DARWIN  REIDPATH  MARTIN 

Buffalo,  N.  Y. 

"Doc."     "Doctor."     "Physic." 

"Life  is  an  art, — the  finest, of  arts.' ' 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    P.  E.  A.  Crew  Association 

Christian  Fraternity;    Empire  State  Club;    Harvard  Club 

Tech.   Club;    Rifle  Club;    Cercle  Francais;    Western  Club 

Orchestra     (2);      Chorus;     Exeter    Battalion,    Company  A 

The  1918  Pean,  Art  Editor;   Honorable  Mention;   Elson  Art 

Exhibit  Committee,  Chairman. 


GEORGE  HAMILTON  MARTINDALE 

San  Antonio,  Tex. 
"George." 
"  Then  on,  then  on,  where  duty  leads.  My  course  be  onward  still. " 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Class  Football  Team; 
Academy  Track  Squad;  Texas  Club;  Christian  Fraternity; 
Southern  Club,  Secretary-Treasurer;  Rifle  Club;  Harvard 
Club;   Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B;    Honorable  Mention. 


EDWARD  LEIGH  McCARTY 

Coeur  d'Alene,  Ida. 
"Mac." 
"  The  mildest  manners  and  the  gentlest  art.  " 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity; 
Club;   Western  Club;   Chorus. 


Yale 


103 


ALBERT  HENRY  CHRISTIAN  OHSE 

New  York,  N.  Y. 

"Al." 

"A  man  in  earnest  finds  means  or  if  he  cannot  find,  creates  them." 
Entered     Lower     Middle     Year;      Christian     Fraternity; 
Empire  State  Club;    G.  L.  Soule  Literary  Society;    Exeter 
Battalion,  Company  A;   Chorus. 


EATON  HOLBROOK  PERKINS 

Melrose,  Mass. 

"Pete."     "Peter." 

"Earnestness  is  needed  in  this  world  as  much  as  any  virtue." 

Entered    LTpper    Middle   Year;     Crew    Squad;     Christian 

Fraternity;    Bay  State  Club;    Dartmouth  Club;    Rifle  Club; 

Cercle  Francais;  Exeter  Battalion,  Company  D. 


WILLIAM  McOEE  PERRY 
Helena,  Mont. 
"Bill." 
"Smiles  are  the  flowers  oj  God's  goodness." 
Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;   Upper  Middle  Class  Football 
Team;    Christian   Fraternity;    Western  Club;    Exeter  Bat- 
talion, Company  D;   Chorus;   Church  Monitor. 


104 


JOHN  WARD  POOLE,  JR. 

Jaffhey,  N.  H. 
"Hick."     "Poolie."     "Johnny."     "John  Ward." 
"He  that  runs  arrives  betimes." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Upper  Middle  Class  Track 
Team;    Pennsylvania  Relay  Team;   Track  Squad;    Christian 
Fraternity;    Tech.  Club;    Granite  State  Club ;    Chapel  Moni- 
tor. 


Bjp11  mw^* 

J 

W I    A 

CHAUNCEY  BEECHER  SANFORD 

Seymour,  Conn. 

"Pete."     "San."     "Sandy." 

"Patience  is  the.  key  of  content.  " 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;    Track  Squad;    Rifle  Club; 

Rifle  Team;    Battalion,  Company  D:    Christian  Fraternity; 

Yale  Club;   Rifle  Club;   Cornell  Club. 


MILTON  COGSWELL  SHATTUCK 

Manchester,  N.  H. 

"Shat." 

"It  is  the  great  profession;  that  of  a  soldier." 

Entered    Lower    Middle    Year;     Rifle    Club;     Christian 

Fraternity;   Exeter  Battalion,  Corporal. 


105 


HOWARD  VERNON  SHIPLEY 

York,  Pa. 

"Pete." 

"Rugged  strength  and  laughing  face." 
Entered    Upper    Middle  Year;    Penn  State  Club;  Cercle 
Francais;  Rifle  Club;  Track  Squad. 


HULET  PIEPER  SMITH 

Minneapolis,  Minn. 

"Huey." 

"  Rises  from  the  ground  like  feathered  mercury." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Upper  Middle  Class  Hockey 

Team;    Upper   Middle   Class  Track   Team;    Track   Squad; 

Christian  Fraternity;  Western  Club;  Cornell  Club;  PhiTheta 

Psi;  Honor  Man,  First  Group  (2);  Honorable  Mention  (4). 


EDGAR  HALLOWELL  STABLER 

Sandy  Spring,  Md. 
"Stabe." 
"Trifles  themselves  are  elegant  in  him." 
Entered    Upper    Middle    Year;      Christian     Fraternity; 
Princeton  Club;    Southern  Club;    Chorus;    Honorable  Men- 
tion. 


106 


ALFRED  BACON  STODDARD 

New  Rochelle,  N.  Y. 
"Al."  "A.  B." 
"Determination  is  the  battery  that  commands  every  road  of  life." 
Entered  Junior  Year;  Empire  State  Club;  Yale  Club; 
Cercle  Francois;  Assembly  Club;  Christian  Fraternity; 
Academy  Track  Squad  (3);  The  Exonian,  Associate  Editor; 
Mandolin  Club  (2);   Chapel  Choir;   Church  Monitor. 


JUSTIN  CORNELIUS  STURM 

Nehawka,  Neb. 

"Jus."     "Doc." 

"Great  is  the  glory,  for  the  strife  is  hard." 

Entered    Lower    Middle   Year;     Class    Track    Team    (2); 

Class  Relay  Team;   Academy  Track  Squad;   Academy  Track 

Team;     B.    A.    A.    Interscholastic    Team;    Academy  Second 

Football     Team;      Academy     Football     Team;       Christian 

Fraternity;    Western    Club;   Yale  Club;.  Exeter  Battalion, 

Sergeant;  Kappa  Delta  Pi. 


FREDERICK  FOSTER  SWEENEY 

East  Jaffrey,  N.  H. 
"Ted."     "Fritz." 
"It  is  tranquil  people  who  accomplish  much." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;   Christian  Fraternity;   Tech. 
Club;  Granite  State  Club;  Orchestra;  Honorable  Mention. 


107 


STERLING  LOCKIE  TAIT 

GoUVERNEUR,    N.    V. 

"Hesitait.  " 
"He  can  outrun  the  winds." 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Track  Squad;    Class  Track 
Team;    Christian  Fraternity;    Empire  State  Club;    Harvard 
Club;   Golden  Branch  Literary  Society. 


ELBRIDGE  TEEL 

Medford,  Mass. 

"Pete."     "Earny." 

"He  most  lives,  who  thinks  most,  feels  the  noblest,  and  nets  the 

best." 

Entered    Lower    Middle   Year;     Crew    Squad;     Academy 

Crew;  Christian  Fraternity;  Bay  State  Club ;  Musical  Clubs; 

Glee  Club;  Chapel  Choir. 


ROBERT  PARKER  TURNBULL 

Detroit,  Mich. 

"Bob." 

"A  modest  mid  well-mannered  j/niilh." 

Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Track  Squad;  Western  Club; 
Phi  Epsilon  Sigma. 


108 


WALTER  EMIL  VIETH 
Davenport,  Ia. 
"Doc."     "Walt."     "Beef." 
"I  am  not  in  the  roll  of  common  men. " 
Entered  Junior  Year;    Academy  Track  Team, 
Manager;     Class    Drill     Squad;    Golden     Branch 
Society,    Secretary,    Treasurer,    President;     The 
Associate  Editor;    Rifle  Club,  Secretary-Treasurer; 
Man,  Second  Group  (2) ;   Honorable  Mention. 


Assistant 

Literary 

Exonian, 

Honor 


JAMES  GORDON  WAKEFIELD 
Honolulu,  H.  I. 

"Wake."     "Gus." 
"  The  mildest  manners  and  the  gentlest  heart. " 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;  Championship  Class  Baseball 
Team;    Academy  Baseball  Squad;    Christian  Fraternity  (2); 
Western  Club  (2);    Harvard  Club;    Princeton  Club;    Kappa 
Epsilon  Pi. 


JOHN  KING  WATSON 

ROCKAWAY,    N.    J. 

"Jack."     "Doc." 
"Speech  is  silver,  silence  is  golden.  " 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company 
B,     Sergeant;    Harvard    Club;    New    Jersey    Club;     Cercle 
Francais;  Rifle  Club. 


109 


STEPHEN  WEBSTER 

Waltham,  Mass. 
"Steve." 
"And  bears  his  blushing  honors  thick  upon  him." 
Entered    Lower    Middle    Year;     Battalion    Baseball,     B 
Company,   Manager;    Academy   Golf  Team,   Manager   (Re- 
signed);    Class   Football    Team    (2);     Christian    Fraternity, 
Cabinet,  Secretary;    Princeton  Club;    Cercle  Frangais;    Bay 
State  Club,  Secretary-Treasurer;   Alpha  Nu;   Golden  Branch 
Literary  Society;    Exeter  Battalion,  Company  B,  Corporal, 
Sergeant,   Exeter  Officers'   Training  Camp;    Orchestra   (2); 
The  Exonian,  Associate  Editor,  Editor-in-Chief   (Resigned); 
Honorable    Mention    (4);     Nathaniel    Gordon    Bible    Prize 
(First);  Exeter  Student  .Union  Fund,  Treasurer. 


CYRIL  BALDWIN  WILCOX 

Fall  River,  Mass. 
"Cy." 
"So  live  thai  when  your  life  shall  end. 
All  men  may  say,  'I've  lost  a  friend.'" 
Entered  Upper  Middle  Year;    Christian  Fraternity;    Har- 
vard Club;   Bay  State  Club;   Chorus. 


ROBERT  LEDLIE  WINTRINGER 
Steubenville,     0. 
"Bob."     "Bud."     "Wint." 
".I  heart  l<>  resolve,  a  head  to  rout  rive,  and  a  hand  to  execute." 

Entered  Lower  Middle  Year;  Class  Football  Team  (2); 
Championship  Lower  Middle  Class  Football  Team;  All 
Class  Football  Team;  Lower  Middle  Class  Hockey  Team; 
Gym.  Team  Squad  (2);  Class  Bowling  Team  (2);  Cham- 
pionship Class  Bowling  Team,  Captain;  Golf  Team;  Track 
Squad;  Christian  Fraternity ;  Princeton  Club;  Western  Club; 
Buckeye  State  Club;  Cercle  Francais;  Rifle  Club;  Vaude- 
ville Show,  Fall,  1917;    Alpha  Nu;    Honorable  Mention. 


110 


0 


Upper  Middle  Class 


OFFICERS 

President L.  W.  Lipscomb 

Vice-President W.  R.  Kent 

Secretary-Treasurer D.  E.  Hewat 


RETURNING  MEMBERS 


Alpaugh,  Chester  Theodore, 
Andrews,  Joseph,  Jr., 
Arthachinta,  Phisit, 
Bagley,  Edwin  Gates, 
Baker,  Harland  Felch, 
Baker,  Henry  Hudson, 
Ball,  Robert  Hamilton, 
Barnard,  Reginald  Napier, 
Bennett,  William  Claypool, 
Bice,  Jarrett  Hiram, 
Bickford,  Hamilton  Judson, 
Black,  Charles  Gilbert,  Jr., 
Bradley,  Robert  Lewis, 
Bronson,  Marshall  Webb, 
Bunnell,  Wilbur  James, 
Carpenter,  Thomas  Sanders, 
Cater,  Berkeley  Aymar, 
Chase,  Jasper  Hiram, 
Chase,  John  Randall, 
Chiperfield,  Robert  Bruce, 
Clifford,  James  Philip, 
Clough,  John  Paul, 
Cogan,  Bernard  Sheridan, 
Conlon,  Arthur  Joseph, 
Cooley,  Charles  Byron, 
Cooper,  Arthur  Gunyon, 
Cotton,  Norris  Henry, 
Crawford,  Andrew  Jefferson, 
Crowell,  John  Chester, 
Cutler,  Eli  Nichols, 


Jr. 


Plainfield,  N.  J., 

G.  W.  Hilliard's 

506 

Englewood,  N.  J., 

W.  27 

289 

Bangkok,  Siam, 

G.  N.  Julian's 

71 

Worcester,  Mass., 

W.  19 

403 

Concord, 

A.  17 

Dunkirk,  N.  Y., 

Veazey  17 

439 

Mahwah,  N.  J., 

D.  48 

109 

Cincinnati,  0., 

H.  22 

324 

Somerville,  Mass., 

A.  15 

58 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

S.  5 

350 

Stolen  Island,  N.  Y. , 

Mrs.  F.  P.  Ham's 

450 

Elizabeth,  N.  J., 

Miss  G  W.  Proctor's 

112 

St.  Louis,  Mo., 

Mrs.  J.  A.  Brown's 

310 

Seattle,  Wash., 

Mrs.  J.  M.  Clark's 

88 

Akron,  0., 

H.  17 

138 

Attleboro,  Mass., 

W.  5 

333 

East  Orange,  N.  J., 

Merrill  1 

359 

Manchester, 

T.  Smith's 

325 

Evansville,  Ind., 

H.  L.  Smith's 

103 

Canton,  III., 

J.  M.  Rowe's 

517 

West  Medford,  Mass., 

W.  H.  Nute's 

387 

Worcester,  Mass., 

Mrs.  S.  P.  Chase's 

222 

Stoneham,  Mass., 

P.  12 

235 

Winchester,  Mass., 

A.  2 

160 

Springfield,  Mass., 

H.  10 

177 

Exeter, 

A.  F.  Cooper's 

371 

Warren, 

A.  23 

531 

Terre  Haute,  Ind., 

S.  24 

373 

Denver,  Col., 

J.  M.  Rowe's 

122 

Atlantic  Highlands,  N.  J., 

H.  15 

330 

111 


Cutter,  Ernest  Foster, 
Davidson,  Donald  Neal, 
Davis,  Harry  Ransom, 
Davis,  Hobart  Williston, 
DePuy.  Charles  Ten  Eyck,  Jr., 
Dexter,  John, 
DuBois,  Jesse  Elting, 
Earl,  Robert  Jerome, 
Elliot,  Robert  Sherrard,  Jr., 
Emmons,  Charles  DeMoss,  Jr., 
Field,  Van  Duzee, 
Flather,  Herbert  Hesselton, 
Fordyce,  Clifton  Powell, 
Fowler,  Wendell  Charles, 
Fry,  Thomas  Eddy, 
Fuller,  Newcomh, 
Gallagher,  William  Franklin, 
Garrick,  Herbert  Frederick, 
Gilbert,  Theodore  Markley,  Jr., 
Gill,  Harold  Edmund, 
Gilmour,  Albert  Davis, 
Gilroy,  Ralph  Charles, 
Glenn,  John  Carter, 
Glover,  Henry  Willis, 
Granger,  David  Ross,  Jr., 
Graves,  Charles  Edward, 
Gulick,  John  Halsey, 
Haley,  Francis  Jeremiah, 
Hand,  Larrabee  Davenport, 
Hanson,  Hilding  Fridtjof  Conrad, 
Hawes,  Cornelius  Hawkins, 
Hay,  Merrill  Allston, 
I  ledge:-    I  lenn    I'm  nam  . 
Herrick,  Warren  Crocker, 
Hess,  George  William, 
Hewat,  Donald  Edward, 
Hidden,  Donald  Bryant, 
Hidden,  Robert  Pratt, 
Higgins,  Robert  Plummer, 
Hilton,  Thorndike, 
Hobson,  Arthur  Lambert,  Jr., 
Holmes,  Albeit  Wood, 
Holmes,  Archie  Samuel, 
Holt,  Richard  Ladd, 
Howland,  William  Slocum, 
Huget,  James  Philip, 
Huntington,  Parker, 
Hurd,  Laurance  Lankier, 
Jackson,  Troy  Albert, 


Lexington,  Mass., 

A.  26 

229 

Boise,  Ida., 

H.  6 

297 

Pittsburgh,  Pa., 

W.  2 

184 

Wiudit  si,  r.  Mass., 

S.  15 

340 

Rochester,  N.  Y., 

D.  31 

219 

Neiv  Bedford,  Mass., 

H.  7 

536 

New  Pallz,  N.  Y.. 

P.  4 

282 

Elkhart,  Ind., 

A.  A. 

218 

New  York,N.  Y., 

W.  14 

432 

Fraviingham  Center,  Mass., 

D.  14 

271 

Jackson,  Mich., 

Gilman  9 

Nashua, 

Williams  9 

296 

Little  Rock,  Ark., 

P.  5 

249 

San  Antonio,  Tex., 

F.  A.  Moore's 

242 

( 'tareinonl. 

G.  N.  Julian's 

286 

Fall  River,  Mass., 

Gilman  12 

394 

Jamaica  Plain,  Mass., 

A.  20 

452 

Yonkcrs.N.  Y., 

II.  E.  Read's 

214 

Neenah,  Wis., 

Williams  10 

364 

Brockton,  Mass., 

A.  24 

454 

Barton,  VI., 

E.  J.  Jones's 

Bradford,  Mass., 

A.  3 

221 

Boston,  Mass., 

M 

rs.  J.  A.  Brown's 

174 

Cheboygan,  Mich., 

Veazey  10 

155 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

J.  E.  Knight's 

245 

Exeter, 

F.  N.  Graves's 

426 

South  Casco,  Me., 

Veazey  20 

18 

Ware,  Mass., 

H.  L.  Tuttle's 

75 

Pclham,Ga., 

D.  19 

Exeter, 

0.  Hanson's 

241 

Fall  River,  Mass., 

W.  20 

225 

Portland,  Me., 

M 

ss  S.  N.  Clarke's 

434 

Youngstown,  0., 

S.  10 

253 

Auburn,  N.  Y., 

A.  A. 

527 

Uniontown,  Pa., 

M 

iss  A.  G.  Jewell's 

265 

North  Attn  ins,  Mass.. 

Miss  A.  Piper's 

165 

Fitchburg,  Mass., 

H.  24 

365 

Filchburg,  Mass., 

C.  E.  Jacobson's 

223 

Winter  Hill,  Mass., 

Mrs 

R.  C.  Shepard's 

255 

Chicago,  III., 

D.  17 

295 

Haverhill,  Mass., 

P.  10 

217 

New  Bedford,  Mass., 

H.  12 

157 

Downsville,  N.  Y., 

S.  7 

449 

Motilpclier,  VI., 

W.  11 

445 

Calskill,N.  Y., 

Mrs.  J.  Manix's 

154 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y ., 

H.  27 

266 

Concord, 

P.  22 

433 

Buffalo,  N.  Y., 

Miss  S.  N.  Clarke's 

431 

Holdenville,  Okla., 

J.  M.  Rowe's 

123 

lli 


Jaeger,  George  Joseph,  Jr., 
James,  Allison  Gale, 
Janes,  Leonard  Palmer,  Jr., 
Jones,  Ralph  Northrup, 
Judson,  Cyrus  Field,  Jr., 
Kaufman,  Leon  Fred, 
Kennedy,  James  A, 
Kent,  William   Robert, 
Knickerbocker,  Irving,  2d, 
Lane,  Melvin  Rudyard, 
Lawther,  William  Shields, 
Lindsay,  Royden  Bonnard, 
Lipscomb,  Louis  Willoughby, 
MacKaye,  Robert  Keith, 
Marshall,  John  Potter, 
Mayo,  Chauncey  Merean, 
McCreery,  Maxwell, 
Meehan,  John  Ryder, 
Monro,  Charles  Bedell, 
Moore,  Warren  Cunningham, 
Moser,  Paul  David, 
Murphy,  Henry  Waldo, 
O'Brien,  John  Harold, 
O'Brien,  Thomas  Kenefick, 
Oenslager,  Donald  Mitchell, 
Peters,  Paul  Ernest  Vicregge, 
'Petersen,  Theodore  Otto, 
Pike,  Roscoe  Marston, 
Piper,  Winthrop  DeForest, 
Powell,  William  Ackland,  Jr., 
Powers,  William  Stuart, 
Pratt,  Thoedore  Gary, 
Price,  Herbert  Peery, 
Pride,  Edwin  Ober, 
Reed,  Henry  Hazen, 
Roaf,  John  Colby, 
Sawyer,  Dana  Dean, 
Sedgwick,  Robert, 
Shaw,  William  Joseph, 
Shearn,  Clarence  John,  Jr., 
Shepard,  Alan  Austen, 
Smith,  Warren  William, 
Stamper,  Garland, 
St.  Clair,  Leo  James, 
Stearns,  Wallace  Everard, 
Stern,  Allison  Lewis, 
Stevens,  Richard  Wooster, 
Stoddard,  Kenneth, 
Stone,  George  Loring  Porter,  Jr. 


Chicago,  III., 

Miss  A.  G.  Jewell's 

384 

Chicago,  III., 

Miss  M.  Cilley's 

Memphis,  Tenn., 

Mrs.  G.  E.  Clough's 

116 

Colcbrook, 

P.  16 

464 

Ardsley-on-Hudson ,  N.  Y., 

H.  26 

378 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

S.  16 

335 

Tulsa,  Okla., 

H.  L.  Smith's 

321 

St.  Joseph,  Mich., 

E.  Buckley's 

115 

New  York  N.  Y., 

S.  19 

318 

Mahwah,  N.  J., 

D.  37 

108 

Dubuque,  la., 

W.  21 

308 

Honolulu,  II.  I., 

G.  S.  Connors's 

146 

San  Antonio,  Tex., 

S.  20 

285 

Windsor,  Vt., 

Veazey  15 

247 

Sapulpa,  Okla.,  ' 

J.  W.  Hale's 

274 

Exeter, 

A.  11 

397 

Pittsburgh,  Pa., 

P.  7 

460 

Amesbury,  Mass., 

A.  32 

368 

Pittsburgh,  Pa., 

W.  2 

260 

East  Orange,  N.  ./., 

A.  26 

305 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

E.  Buckley's 

183 

West  New  Brighton,  N.  Y., 

S.ll 

302 

Fulton,  N.  Y., 

S.  S 

375 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

H.  20 

501 

Harrisburg,  Pa., 

D.  45 

93 

Toronto,  Can., 

S.  23 

288 

Philadelphia,  Pa., 

P.  4 

298 

Lubec,  Me., 

H.  L.  Tuttle's 

33 

Keene, 

G.  S.  Connors's 

534 

Brookline,  Mass., 

Mrs.  H.  J.  Foss's 

270 

Englewood,  N.  J., 

Gilman  8 

543 

Richmond,  Va., 

Veazey  9 

372 

Elkader,  la.. 

W.  Tuttle's 

139 

Somerville,  Mass., 

Williams  8 

362 

Mount  Vernon,  N .  Y ., 

W.  15 

388 

Newbury  port,  Mass., 

W.  Burlingame's 

216 

Haverhill,  Mass., 

Merrill  2 

361 

Highland  Park,  III., 

W.  26 

234 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

A.  3 

66 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

W.  14 

272 

Buffalo,  N.  Y., 

W.  B.  Kenniston's    . 

502 

Oqunquit,  Me., 

A.  25 

60 

Hindman,  Ky., 

A.  20 

435 

Gorham, 

H.  23 

540 

Concord, 

'     S.  10 

281 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

J.  E.  Knight's 

Deep  River,  Conn., 

Veazey  14 

356 

NewRochelle,N.  Y., 

Mrs.  F.  P.  Ham's 

210 

New  York,N.  Y., 

W.  23 

264 

113 


Stone,  John  Sydney, 
Stonehill,  Charles  Archibald,  Jr., 
Storrn,  John, 
Strong,  David  Fales, 
Sullivan,  Newton  Eugene, 
Sutphen,  Kenneth  Carlyle, 
Sweet,  George  Albert,  2d, 
Sweetser,  Jess  William, 
Thayer,  Roland  Taylor, 
Thayer,  William  Frederick, 
Thomas,  Winthrop  Atherton, 
Thompson,  Clarence  Embler,  3d, 
Tilton,  Kenneth  Joseph, 
Torkelson,  Howard  Thamer, 
Townsend,  Girard  Bostwick,  Jr., 
Valdivieso,  Jorge  Lucas  Perez, 
Van  Buren,  Arthur  Henry, 
Vernon,  William  Ward, 
Walker,  Shores  Adelbert, 
Warren,  Lawrence  Clayton, 
Weist,  John  Rollin, 
Wertheim,  David  Kaufman, 
Westbrook,  Lloyd, 
Wheeler,  Edmond  Beach, 
Willson,  J  Curtis, 
Wilson,  Alexander  Logan, 
Wilson,  Donald  Orr, 


Upper  Montclair,  N.  J., 

Merrill  3 

251 

Glencoc,  III., 

Veazey  13 

314 

Niagara  Falls,  N.  Y., 

Williams  6 

Winsted,  Conn., 

Edward  Gilman  1 

186 

Boise,  Ida., 

H.  6 

303 

Newark,  N.  J., 

P.  14 

Central  Falls,  R.  I., 

R.  S.  Perkins's 

175 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

H.  19 

463 

Winter  Hill,  Mass., 

Mrs.  E.  M.  Home's 

442 

Port  Washington,  N.  Y., 

E.  Buckley's 

119 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

W.  30 

443 

West  Haven,  Conn., 

Gilman  2 

196 

Laconia, 

P.  3 

290 

Sioux  Rapids,  la., 

H.  25 

344 

Montclair,  N.  J., 

Gilman  6 

243 

Ponce,  P.  R., 

J.  W.  Hale's 

73 

Hobart,  N.  Y., 

Gilman  4 

410 

Montclair,  N.  J., 

C.  H.  Sargent's 

195 

Duluth,  Minn., 

H.  17 

230 

Arlington,  Mass., 

P.  23 

178 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

D.  49 

284 

Great  Falls,  Mont., 

Veazey  8 

317 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y., 

W.  28 

525 

Stratford,  Conn., 

Merrill  3 

294 

Flint,  Mich., 

W.  28 

428 

Pittsburgh,  Pa. 

H.  13 

358 

Binghamton,  N.  Y., 

H.  1. 

300 

114 


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W 

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M 
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Q 

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1-1 


LOWER 

MIDDLE 

CLASS 


lite: 


HENCE,  vain  Lowers, 
Of  insignificance  and  prepishness  born 
In  hopelessness  forlorn, 
Childish  fancies  within  your  idle  brain 
Must  vanish  now. 
Juvenile  acts  or  football  victories 
Let  be  no  more  your  vain  and  fruitless  boast, 
And  freshness  and  conceit, 
The  shameful  signs  of  youth,  must  pass. 

But  hail,  you  coming  Uppers, 

The  future  lies  ahead 

With  prospects  bright  and  clear. 

Be  honest,  modest,  cheerful,  wise, 

Work  for  the  school  and  not  for  selfish  self, 

Be  bold,  adventurous,  steadfast,  zealous,  too, 

And  you  will  make  yourselves  a  mighty  name. 


117 


Loiuer  Middle  Class 


OFFICERS 

President R.  G.  Smith 

Vice-President J.  N.  Knowles 

Secretary-Treasurer Corliss  Lamont 


MEMBERS 

Adams,  Chester  DeForest, 

Did  nth,  Minn., 

D.  16 

307 

Aderer,  Walter  Irving, 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

DeMeritt  1 

312 

Adler,  Philip  Franklin, 

Milwaukee,  Wis., 

W.  Burlingame's 

213 

Allen,  John  Erwin, 

Winter  Hill,  Mass., 

S.  18 

57 

Andre,  William  Clayton, 

Hackensack,  N.  J., 

Merrill  7 

185 

Andrews,  Edward  Day, 

Akron,  0., 

C.  E.  Jacobson's 

120 

Armstrong,  Leroy  Morris, 

Amesbury,  Mass., 

W.  Burlingame's 

125 

Babb,  James  Tinkham, 

Lewiston,  Ida., 

J.  E.  Knight's 

117 

Baldwin,  Arthur  Paul, 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

Merrill  8 

530 

Bardol,  Frank  Howard, 

Brookline,  Mass., 

W.  17 

233 

Barker,  Fay  Merrill, 

Old  Town,  Me., 

P.  23 

228 

Barker,  George  Thornton, 

Old  Town,  Me., 

S.  11 

237 

Barringer,  John  Paul, 

Haverford,  Pa., 

Hooper 

42 

Beaman,  Joseph  Malcolm, 

Westboro,  Mass., 

Gilnian  10 

447 

Beaman,  Roger  Wolcott, 

Westboro,  Mass., 

W.  23 

489 

Bean,  Ralph  Lyon, 

Lebanon, 

P.  8 

545 

Bell,  Oscar  Ernest, 

Berlin, 

Mrs.  J.  A.  Brown's 

173 

Bellows,  John, 

Walpole, 

Merrill  6 

257 

Berry,  Rufus  Lecompte,  Jr., 

Springfield,  III., 

H.  19 

80 

Bickford,  Albert  Condc, 

New  Brighton,  N.  Y., 

Mrs.  F.  P.  Ham's 

192 

Blanehard,  Edward  Rollin, 

North  Uxbridge,  Mass., 

Mrs.  H.  J.  Foss's 

2 

Bonner,  Douglas  Griswold, 

Brooklyn,  N.  Y., 

D.  23 

94 

Bo  wen,  John  Rhys, 

Ansonia,  Conn., 

D.  35 

172 

Bowers,  George  Waldron, 

Iron  River,  Mich., 

Gilman  5 

238 

Brickley,  Arthur  Warren, 

Arlington,  Mass., 

J.  E.  Keefe's 

313 

Brown,  Louis  Pratt, 

Glens  Falls,  N.  Y., 

Miss  H.  E.  Tilton's 

254 

Brown,  Stephen  DeValson, 

Glens  Falls,  N.  Y., 

D.  10 

191 

Bullard,  Howard  B,  Jr., 

Saratoga  Springs,  N.  Y ., 

H.  13 

129 

Bullard,  Robert  Paul, 

Beach inont,  Mass., 

A.  15 

396 

Burke,  Russell  Henderson, 

Charleston,  Miss., 

H.  12 

131 

118 


Burleigh,  Bradford  Putnam, 
Bushed,  Gay  Brayton, 
Butler,  Joseph  Green, 
Campbell,  Harper, 
Cantillon,  William  David, 
Carpenter,  Charles  Cummings, 
Chapman,  Gilbert  Whipple, 
Cleveland,  Francis  Grover, 
Clinton,  Duane  Lester, 
Colton,  Dean  Richardson. 
Connolly,  Stephen  John,  Jr., 
Conway,  Thomas  Luic, 
Copeland,  Lowell  Townsend, 
Creighton,  John  Turner, 
Curran,  Arthur  Patrick, 
Currier,  Charles  Ford, 
Davis,  David  Theodore,  Jr., 
Dickison,  Horace  Earl, 
Dixon,  William  Tucker, 
Downey,  Robert  Arthur,  Jr., 
DuBois,  Paul  Farrand, 
Elliott,  Raymond  Robert, 
Ellison,  Henry  Corser, 
Emery,  Harvey  Charles, 
Failing,  Donald, 
Falk,  Leon,  Jr., 
Farnham,  Francis  Morrison, 
Farnham,  John  Ripley, 
Finley,  Raymond  Bell, 
Fisher,  Kimball, 
Fisher,  Samuel  Curtis, 
Fitzgerald,  Thomas  Francis,  Jr. 
Franklin,  William  Buel,  Jr., 
Freeman,  Homer  Hamilton, 
French,  George  Bradbury, 
Gardner,  George  Eddy, 
Geddes,  Donald  Porter, 
Gobey,  John  Lersch, 
Goode,  Edward  Francis, 
Goodell,  Phillips  Wendland, 
Goodman,  Allen  Harold, 
Goodnow,  Donald  Ray, 
Graves,  Horace  Pease, 
Grouard,  Leonard  Baker, 
Guion,  El  wood  Walker, 
Hale,  Edward  Pillsbury, 
Hall,  Arthur  Fletcher,  Jr., 
Halsell,  John  Glinn, 
Harrington,  Frank  Leighton, 


Newark,  N.  J., 

D.  28 

64 

Los  Angeles,  Cat., 

D.  19 

133 

Youngstown,  0., 

H.  11 

309 

Everett,  Mass., 

A.  22 

212 

Minneapolis,  Minn., 

Mrs.  R.  C.  Shepard's 

376 

Brookline,  Mass., 

S.  3 

162 

Wood  mere,  N.  Y ., 

D.  25 

96 

Princeton,  N .  J., 

D.  34 

152 

Oak  Park,  III, 

S.  28 

114 

Concord, 

Merrill  7 

126 

Beverly  Farms,  Mass., 

P.  14 

200 

Lowell,  Mass., 

Mrs.  R.  C.  Shepard's 

Winnetka,  III., 

Merrill  6 

342 

Thomaston,  Me., 

H.  14 

512 

Rumford,  Me., 

Miss  A.  M.  Chesley's 

189 

Brookline,  Mass., 

D.  6 

91 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

DeMeritt  3 

348 

Houlton,  Me., 

Watkins  2 

444 

Hanover, 

D.  42 

107 

Oswego,  N.  Y., 

W.  7 

Hudson,  N.  Y., 

D.  40 

127 

West  Somerville,  Mass., 

A.  27 

256 

Walertown,  Mass., 

Mrs.  S.  E.  Oakman's 

226 

Hobokcn,  N.  J., 

J.  E.  Knight's 

99 

Westfield,  N.  J., 

Dunbar  Annex  5 

102 

Pittsburgh,  Pa., 

D.  27 

106 

Swampscott,  Mass., 

H.  4 

263 

Portland,  Me., 

C.  H.  Sargent's 

276 

Saratoga  Springs,  N .  Y., 

S.  8 

437 

Augusta,  Me., 

P.  7 

Washington,  D.  C, 

Veazey  19 

240 

Dorchester,  Mass., 

A.  29 

149 

Haver ford,  Pa., 

D.  2 

43 

Flint,  Mich., 

P.  1 

Portsmouth , 

W.  32 

60 

Fargo,  N.  D., 

H.  Raybold's 

Somerville,  Mass., 

A.  4 

59 

Columbus,  0., 

Edward  Gilman  6 

301 

Roxbury,  Mass., 

A.  11 

353 

Loda,  III., 

W.  4 

156 

Philadelphia,  Pa., 

A.  10 

402 

Fitchburg,  Mass., 

G.  P.  Kimball's 

366 

Dayton,  0., 

P.  24 

Nantucket,  Mass., 

D.  20 

32 

New  Bern,  N.  C, 

Merrill  5 

134 

Manchester, 

S.  14 

207 

Fort  Wayne,  Ind., 

H.  4 

Fort  Worth,  Tex., 

J.  H.  Symonds's 

278 

Worcester,  Mass., 

D.  30 

206 

119 


Stockton,  Mo., 

Hartley,  Howard  deLozier, 

Miss  H.  E.  Tilton's 

438 

Hastings,  Wellwood  Franklvn, 

North  Adams,  Mass., 

H.  14 

411 

Haven,  William  Allen, 

Cincinnati,  0., 

J.  W.  Hale's 

105 

Havens,  Walker, 

Oakland,  Cal., 

Mrs.  J.  M.  Clark's 

39 

Hilgartner,  Heinrich  Louis, 

Austin,  Te.r., 

C.  E.  Jacobson's 

505 

Hitzrot,  Henry  William, 

McKeesport ,  Pa., 

Edward  Gilman  5 

25 

Holmes,  John  Milton,  Jr., 

Wyoming,  N.  J., 

Merrill  A 

11 

Howe,  John  Ireland,  3d, 

Englewood,  N.  J.. 

Gilman  11 

280 

Hunt,  William  Eustis, 

Magnolia,  Mass., 

A.  4 

379 

Hunter,  Richard  Connely, 

Newtown  Square,  Pa., 

Merrill  A 

209 

HutchinSj  Frank, 

Wolfeboro  Falls, 

H.  E.  Read's 

142 

Johnson,  Jarvis, 

Denver,  Col., 

W.  17 

232 

Jonasson,  Robert  Leon, 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

E.  J.  Jones's 

326 

Jones,  Robert  Howard, 

Dayton,  0., 

P.  24 

370 

Kehler,  Gordon  Matlack, 

Deerjicld,  III., 

Mrs.  S.  E.  Oakman's 

148 

Kennedy,  George  Wilton, 

South  Easton,  Mass., 

D.  9 

352 

Kimball,  John  McKinstry, 

Portland,  Me., 

Williams  5 

236 

Kingsbury,  Harold  Edson, 

Maiden,  Mass., 

A.  12 

167 

Knowles,  Josiah  Niekerson, 

Oakland,  Cal., 

Williams  1 

176 

Kreiger,  William  Christian,  Jr., 

Johnstown,  Pa., 

Miss  A.  M.  Chesley's 

35 

Krogness,  Melville  Arthur  Rud, 

Oak  Park,  ///., 

Edward  Gilman  2 

23 

Lamb,  Raymond  Thomas, 

Dover, 

A.  28 

150 

Lamont,  Corliss, 

Englewood,  N.  J., 

W.  1 

121 

Lang,  James  Harvey,  Jr., 

Larehrnont,  N .  Y ., 

S.  17 

113 

Leigh  ton,  Richard  Arthur, 

Tunkhannock,  Pa., 

A.  16 

283 

Lester,  Charles  McLane, 

Monlclair,  N.  J., 

Dunbar  Annex  6 

147 

Lewis,  George  Weston,  Jr., 

Rocky  Ford,  Col., 

Miss  G.  W.  Proctor's 

111 

Libby,  Spencer  Hartigan, 

Iron  River,  Mich., 

W.  22 

161 

Logie,  James  Archbald, 

Upper  Monlclair,  N .  J .. 

Thompson  1 

353 

Luman,  Richard  John, 

Big  Piney,  Wyo., 

Mrs.  S.  P.  Chase's 

345 

Lunge,  Raymond  Frank, 

Kennebunk,  Me., 

S.  4 

354 

Lyford,  Robert  Erdmann, 

Torrington,  Conn., 

Mrs.  0.  Lane's 

211 

Marston,  Pliilip  Adalbert, 

North  Hampton, 

North  Hampton 

20 

McAdams,  Gregory  Jerome, 

Lowell,  Mass., 

A.  18 

72 

McCarter,  Uzal  Haggerty,  2d, 

Rum  son,  N .  J ., 

Williams  6 

383 

McCarty,  Barclay  Ver  Planck, 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

Mrs.  J.  Manix's 

275 

McCarty,  Edward  Leigh, 

Coeur  d'Alene,  Ida., 

Veazey  1G 

244 

McConnell,  David  Hall,  Jr., 

Suffcrn,  N.  Y., 

Williams  1 

101 

McConnell,  Maxwell, 

Dorchester,  Mass., 

Miss  A.  E.  Ferris's 

327 

McDermott,  George  Leo, 

Stoneham,  Mass., 

C.  C.  Flagg's 

546 

Mclnerney,  Peter  Charles  Crowley, 

East  Bravntree,  Mass., 

Dunbar  Annex  4 

351 

Millet,  John  Howland, 

Brockton,  Mass., 

Mrs.  S.  P.  Chase's 

315 

Mitcham,  Edward  Hartwell, 

Governor's  Island,  N.  Y '., 

D.  1 

95 

Moran,  Thomas  Andrew, 

Amesbury,  Mass., 

A.  31 

144 

Morrissey,  Don  Isle  Robert  Power, 

Minneapolis,  Minn., 

J.  W.  Hale's 

74 

Moser,  Coleman  Clarkson, 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

Dunbar  Annex  4 

89 

\Io   i  i      l\:u  1  , 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

Dunbar  Annex  3 

90 

Moshier,  Phipps  Geiger, 

Hopkinlon ,  Mass . , 

Mrs.  E.  M.  Doe's 

277 

Mullen,  Thomas  Luke, 

Charlestown,  Mass., 

W.  15 

208 

120 


Murray,  Edward  Guennap, 
Myers,  Cecil  Bartlett, 
Officer,  Daniel  Neill, 
Olmsted,  Hollister  Kingsland, 
O'Meara,  Donald  Laurence, 
O'Neil,  John  Edward,  Jr., 
Owen,  Francis  Hamlet,  Jr., 
Parrott,  Arthur  Franklin,  Jr., 
Phinney,  Albert  Andrews, 
Plimpton,  George  Winslow, 
Poole,  Herbert  Slade, 
Porter,  Stockton  Fears, 
Prime,  Benjamin  Lovell, 
Purcell,  Julius  William, 
Rix,  Fred  Northrup, 
Roberts,  Gaines  Trowbridge, 
Robertson,  Wilbur  Hovey, 
Robinson,  William  Wistar, 
Rowley,  Fitch  Hartford, 
Sanford,  Varick  Risclon, 
Savage,  Robert, 
Schloss,  Nathan, 
Schroll,  Alfred  Caldwell, 
Scranton,  Sereno  Samuel, 
Selleck,  Jerome  Noyes, 
Sewall,  Oscar  Crosby, 
Smith,  Everard  Appleton, 
Smith,  Lee  Oscar, 
Smith,  Manson  Bowles, 
Smith,  Ronald  Gervaise, 
Snoddy,  Randolph  Davis, 
Staples,  Albert  Dixon, 
Steiger,  Albert  Edward, 
Sukhum,  Prasob, 
Super,  Albert  Harris, 
Thomas,  Everett  Daniel, 
Thomas,  Widgery, 
Thornton,  William  Wallace, 
Underwood,  Richard  Laskey, 
Van  Bergen,  Curtis  Edson,  Jr., 
Vorys,  Hermann, 
Watson,  Jabez  Curry,  Jr., 
Whedon,  Spencer  Herbert, 
Wilkie,  John, 
Woodbury,  Peter, 
Wyman,  Jasper  Hollis, 
Yeaton,  Philip  Edmund, 


Mount  Vernon,  N.  Y., 

Moulton  2 

54 

Duluth,  Minn., 

Watkins  3 

118 

Salt  Lake  City,  Utah, 

Watkins  4 

261 

Winchester,  Mass., 

P.  17 

414 

Torrington,  Conn., 

M 

rs.  0.  Lane's 

168 

Lawrence,  Mass., 

A.  29 

220 

Brookline,  Mass., 

W.  31 

273 

Augusta,  Me., 

Watkins  1 

480 

Newton,  Mass., 

A.  21 

496 

Norwood,  Mass., 

D.  36 

374 

Brookline,  Mass., 

W.  16 

415 

Muskogee,  Okla., 

Miss  G. 

M.  Porter's 

110 

Yonkers,  N.  Y., 

Dunbar  Annex  7 

170 

Vancouver,  B.  C, 

Mrs.  M. 

E.  Purcell's 

416 

Pike, 

G 

.  N.  Julian's 

369 

Philadelphia,  Pa., 

S.  20 

87 

North  Yakima,  Wash., 

S.  15 

194 

Newton  Highlands,  Mass., 

P.  1 

338 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

Williams  6 

538 

Potsdam,  N.  Y.. 

P.  H 

Linaberry's 

316 

Duluth,  Minn., 

Mrs. 

H.  J.  Foss's 

169 

New  York,  N.  Y ., 

Mrs. 

H.  J.  Foss's 

97 

Fort  Wayne,  Ind., 

G. 

8.  Connors's 

224 

Trenton,  N.  J., 

S.  21 

199 

Exeter, 

G. 

H.  Selleck's 

153 

Englewood,  N.  J., 

W.  12 

279 

Charleston,  W.  Va., 

P.  H. 

Linaberry's 

Canton,  III., 

W.  16 

67 

East  Hebron, 

Mrs.  A. 

K.  Bubgee's 

484 

Chester,  W.  Va., 

H.  25 

180 

West  Lafayette,  Ind., 

P.  B 

.  Linaberry's 

21 

Eliot,  Me., 

S.  21 

268 

Springfield,  Mass., 

Williams  4 

347 

Singora,  Siam, 

G 

.  N.  Julian's 

Haddonfield,  N.  J., 

A.  33 

63 

Scranton,  Pa., 

D.  41 

269 

Portland,  Me., 

W.  24 

323 

Youngstoum,  0., 

H.  11 

49 

Washington,  D.  C, 

Mrs. 

E.  M.  Doe's 

215 

Duluth,  Minn., 

H.  17 

171 

Columbus,  0., 

W.  5 

7 

New  York,  N.  Y., 

W.  24 

187 

Medina,  N.  Y., 

Dunbar  11 

151 

New  York,  N.  Y '., 

D.  38 

100 

Bedford, 

W.  10 

446 

Millbridge,  Me., 

Veazey  11 

258 

Amesbury,  Mass., 

A.  32 

145 

121 


■■■■■ 

!!■■■■ 


o 


£ 


JUsr 

VlYfi 


TO  put  it  in  everyday  language  preps  and  in  your  own  style  we  can't  see  you  at  all  for  you 
are  by  far  the  prepiest  of  prep  classes  that  have  infested  Dunbar  hall  in  all  its  notorious 
history  and  in  the  opinion  of  many  in  the  entire  history  of  the  school  but  perhaps  that  is  a 
little  too  much  to  claim  though  the  fact  that  you  do  not  seem  to  realize  your  condition  as  we 
hoped  you  would  during  the  winter  or  even  during  the  spring  term  has  strengthened  the  opinion 
for  you  steadily  grew  worse  and  worse  till  it  is  with  great  anxiety  that  we  leave  you  under  the 
guidance  of  1919  inasmuch  as  we  despair  of  their  ever  making  any  kind  of  a  class  at  all  out  of 
you  and  we  shudder  to  think  what  would  become  of  the  old  school  should  another  bunch  anything 
like  you  arrive  next  year  so  we  here  advise  you  to  follow  the  example  set  by  1918  and  shun  that 
of  1919  and  1920  as  you  would  the  small  pox  or  alumni  fish  and  in  closing  to  brace  you  up  we  will 
give  you  all  the  praise  possible  and  perhaps  more  than  you  deserve  by  saying  that  you  are  the 
best  junior  class  in  school  at  the  present  time  period. 


123 


Junior  Class 

OFFICERS 

I'ri  sitlt  nt B.  D.  Bennett 

Vice-President H.  L.  Spooner 

Secretary-Treasurer II.  D.  Batjmer 

MEMBERS 

Adams,  Pierpont,  Redding  Ridge,  Conn.,  D.  18  132 

Avery,  Albert  Gray,  Middlelown  Springs,  Vt.,  Miss  A.  E.  Ferris's  46 

Balch,  Howard  David,  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  D.  12  205 

Baumer,  Herman  Dibert,  Johnstown,  Pa.,  D.  30 

Bean,  John  Gordon,  Lebanon,  DeMeritt  2  16 

Benjamin,  Philip  Emery,  Caslinc,  Me.,  S.  3  38 

Bennett,  Bradford  David,  Somerville,  Mass.,  A.  13  391 

Berry,  Charles  Howard,  Rockland,  Me.,  D.  44  141 

Blake,  John  Lauris,  East  Moriches,  N.  Y.,  D.  44  4 

Blish,  Meedy  White  Shields,  Seymour,  I  rid.,  H.  S  436 

Botsford,  Edward  Pottle,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Gooch  2  367 

Brown,  Robert  Fletcher,  New  York,  N.  Y.,  Dunbar  Annex  7  143 

Brownson,  Leonard  Esmond,  Jr.,  Burlington.,  Vt.,  Miss  A.  E.  Ferris's  202 

Burgess,  Albert  Edward,  Belmont,  Mass.,  A.  2  159 

Camp,  Elisha,  Atlantic  Highlands,  N.  J.,  D.  33  6 

Cantillon,  George  Bently,  Eagle  Grove,  la.,                         Mrs.  R.  C.  Shepard's  524 

Carduff,  Scott,  East  Spri?ig field,  Mass.,  A.  19  86 

Chase,  Sydney  Octavius,  Jr.,  Sanford,  Fla.,  P.  6  135 

Chew,  Robert  Zent,  Fredericklown,  0.,  G.  N.  Julian's  320 

Colfelt,  Brinton  White,  New  York,  N.  Y.,  D.  22  201 

Cook,  James  Whitney,  Mount  Holly,  Vt.,  Gooch  4  76 

Cook,  John  Langdon,  Mount  Holly,  Vt.,  Gooch  5  77 

Crenshaw,  Richard  Parker,  Jr.,  Washington,  D.  C,  D.  47  203 

Currier,  Paul  Slocum,  Leominster,  Mass.,  Veazey  7  85 

Davis,  Edward  Aaron,  Jr.,  Bethel,  Vt.,  W.  31  128 

Deane,  Richard  Miller,  Fall  River,  Mass.,  Porter  5  61 

Dunlap,  John,  Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  Miss  A.  E.  Ferris's  47 

Glover,  George,  Weymouth,  Mass.,  Mrs.  E.  M.  Doe's  62 

Goff,  William  David,  Jr.,  Providence,  R.  I.,  D.  3  52 

Gordman,  Alan  Frederick,  Millerlon,  N.  Y.,  Merrill  8  12 

Hardy,  James  Ramsay  Gordon,  El  Paso,  Tex.,  D.  15  204 

Howard,  Woodbury,  Nashua,  Dunbar  Annex  6  92 

Hubbard,  Buckley,  Ashtabula,  O.,  Veazey  12  15 

Kelly,  Joseph  Lawrence,  Duluth,  Minn.,  Mrs.  H.  J.  Foss's  34 

Knight,  Charles  Henry,  Jr.,  Exeter,  C.  H.  Knight's  27 

Linnekin,  Leroy  Corliss,  Gloucester,  Mass.,  A.  14  53 

Lyman,  Lowell  Washburn,  Mount  Kisco,  N.  Y.,  D.  26  31 

MacKenzie,  Kenneth,  Muscatine,  la.,  D.  10  140 

MacLaren,  Donald  Ross,  Princeton,  N.  J.,  D.  43  29 

MacMorran,  Henry  Gordon,  Port  Huron,  Mich.,  D.  32  5 

Malburn,  Charlcs'Thomas,  Englewood,  N.  ./.,  D.  20  70 

Marvin,  Kellogg,  Englewood,  N.  ./.,  D.  8  50 

McAdams,  Brendan  Vincent,  Lowell,  Mass.,  A.  IS  10 


124 


McCaw,  Robert  Plant,                           Cincinnati,  0.,                                                         D.  7  311 

Myers,  John  Traver,                               Upper  Montclair,  N.  ./.,                                   Porter  6  41 

Norris,  Albert,  Jr.,                                  Morristown,  N.  ./.,                                     Thompson  2  45 

Northrop,  Gerald  Ellis,                          Castleton,  Vl.,                                                   Soule  26  193 

Palmer,  Clarence  Axel,                           South  Orange,  N '.  J.,                                             A.  16  124 

Parsons,  Reginald,                                  Johnstown,  Pa.,                         Miss  A.  M.  Chesley's  82 

Pierson,  Frank  Orian  Ward,                  Cromwell,  Conn.,                                   Mrs.  O.  Lane's  136 

Pond,  George  Ownes,                              Torrington,  Conn.,                         Miss  A.  E.  Ferris's  158 

Pratt,  John  Henry,  Jr.,                          Tampa,  Flo.,                                    Mrs.  E.  M.  Doe's  130 

Quarles,  John  Vernon,                            Salmon,  Ida.,                                                           D.  5  30 

Reel,  John  Gordon,                                 Kingston,  N.  Y.,                            Miss  A.  E.  Ferris's  SI 

Reilly,  Herbert  Faulkner,                      Flushing,  N.  Y.,                                        Thompson  3  79 

Robb,  Leonard  Lispenard,                     Troy,  N.  Y.,                                                          D.  13  44 

Robinson,  Frederick  Charles  Arthur,   Pike,                                                                        A.  22  78 

Roulette,  William  Updegraff,                Hagerstown,  Md.,                                                  W.  33  267 

Rust,  Gwinn  Wheelwright,                    Washington,  D.  C,                               Mrs.  O.  Lane's  14 

Sada,  Andres  G,                                       Monterey,  M ex.,                                            Moulton  3  40 

Sada,  Diego  G,                                        Monterey,  Mex.,                                                Gooch  1  1 

Sears,  Wesley  Meckstroth,                    Chicago,  III.,                                           H.  M.  Shute's  419 

Sherrill,  George,  Jr.,                               Stamford,  Conn.,                                                   D.  24  3 

Smith,  Donald,                                        Far  Rockaway,  N.  Y.,                                    Gilman  9  19 

Spooner,  Harold  Linwood,                     Rockland,  Mass.,                                                    W.  1  413 

Stein,  Samuel  Sawyer,                            Muscatine ,  la.,                                                      D.  10  262 

Stoddard,  Laurence  Ralph,                   New  Rochelle,  N.  Y:,                       Mrs.  F.  P.  Ham's  13 

Stoeger,  Alexander  Francis,  Jr.,            Ml.  Vernon,  N.  Y.,                                      Moulton  1  48 

Swazey,  Albert  Darling,                         Bucksport,  Me.,                                         Thompson  3  84 

Talcott,  William  Thomas,                      Winthrop,  Mass.,                                      J.  E.  Keefe's  22 

Trenchard,  Wendell  Bondurant,           DeLand,  III,                                Mrs.  A.  K.  Bugbee's  188 

Upton,  Paul  Albert,                                Brockton,  Mass.,                         Mrs.  S.  E.  Oakman's  9 

Van  der  Horst,  Allston,                          Short  Hills,  N.  J.,                                                 D.  21  51 

Van  de  Water,  John  Edward,               Havana,  Cuba,                                                  Gooch  3  17 

Willich,  Theo  Charles  Robert,              Leonia,  N.  J.,                                   Mrs.  E.  M.  Doe's  24 

Zelie,  John  Sheridan,  Jr  ,                       Plainfield,  N.  J.,                                             Gilman  9  500 

SUMMARY   (DECEMBER  CATALOGUE) 

Senior 124 

Upper  Middle 198 

Lower 175 

Junior 76 

Total 573 

ENROLMENT  BY  STATES 
Massachusetts,  121;  New  York,  100;  New  Jersey,  52;  New  Hampshire,  47;  Pennsylvania, 
31;  Maine,  25;  Ohio,  22;  Connecticut,  20;  Illinois,  18;  Vermont,  12;  Indiana,  11;  Michigan .10; 
Minnesota,  10;  Texas,  10;  Iowa,  8;  Colorado,  5;  District  of  Columbia,  5;  Idaho,  5;  Oklahoma, 
5;  California,  4;  Maryland,  3;  Missouri,  3;  Rhode  Island,  3;  Washington,  3;  West  Virginia,  3; 
Wisconsin,  3;  Canada,  2;  Delaware,  2;  Florida,  2;  Georgia,  2;  Hawaii,  2;  Kentucky,  2;  Mexico, 
2;  Mississippi,  2;  Montana,  2;  North  Dakota,  2;  Siam,  2;  Wyoming,  2;  Arizona,  1 ;  Arkansas, 
1;  British  Columbia,  1 ;  Cuba,  1 ;  Nebraska,  1;  North  Carolina,  1 ;  Porto  Rico,  1;  Tennessee,  1; 
Utah,  1;  Virginia,  1;.    Total,  573. 


CI 


125 


O 

Q 
O 


I*-" 


Ready  Reference  Picture  of  Entire  School  Body 
Given  name,  to  find  picture:    For  Seniors  see  pages     ....         49-86 

For  Non-Heturaing  Uppers  see  pages 96-110 

For  Returning  Uppers,  see  numbers  in  last  columns  on  pages      111-114 
For  Lowers  see  numbers  in  last  columns  on  pages         ....      118-121 

For  Juniors  see  numbers  in  last  column  on  pages 124-125 

The  number  in  the  last  column  refers  to  the  number  on  the  big  picture. 


ttiZtS 


Top  Row— A.  P.  Curran,  H.  W.  Clark,  Cotton,  Cobb,  Buttrick,  Lippincott. 
Second  Row — Nickerson,  Day,  Hoagland,  Goodell,  Berkeley,  Adler,  Kleymeyer. 
Third  Row — Rice,  H.  W.  Davis,  Bathgate,  Conant,  Sack,  Renner. 
Bollom  Row — E.  C.  Clark,  Gutwillig,  Cole,  Lenahan,  Swift,  Prof.  Tufts,  Colony. 

GOLDEN  BRANCH 


132 


Golden  Branch 


President  .  . 
Vice-President 
Secretary  .  . 
Treasurer  .  . 
Librarian  .    . 


OFFICERS 

Fall  Term  Winter  Term 

W.  E.  Vieth  J.  K.  Lenahan 

G.  F.  O'Brien*,  J.  K.  Lenahan  J.  G.  Swift,  Jr. 
E.  C.  Clark  C.  C.  Cole 

P.    W.    GoODELL  W.    S.    GUTWILLIG 


J.  J.  Sack 


H.  Colony,  2d 


Spring  Term 
H.  E.  Rice,  Jr. 

W.    S.    GUTWILLIG 

J.  J.  Sack 

R.  W.  Berleley 

J.  E.  Bathgate,  3d 


J.  E.  Bathgate,  3d 
R.  W.  Berkeley 
Stedman  Buttrick,  Jr. 
E.  C.  Clark 
C.  B.  P.  Cobb 
C.  C.  Cole 


W.  C.  Bennett 
H.  W.  Clark 
L.  M.  Conant 
N.  H.  Cotton 

P.  F.  Adler 
A.  P.  Curran 


MEMBERS 


1918 
H.  Colony,  2d 
Lindsay  Crawford 
K.  C.  Darling 
C.  L.  Day 

J.    P.    GlLMORE 

W.    S.    GUTWILLIG 


R.  P.  Hoagland,  Jr.   J.  C.  Pickard 


L.  W.  Knowles 
A.  P.  Lang 
J.  K.  Lenahan 
J.  M.  McClenahan 


Gordon  Renner 
H.  E.  Rice,  Jr. 
J.  J.  Sack 
J.  G.  Swift,  Jr. 


191.9 


H.  W.  Davis 
W.  C.  H.  Howard 
R.  T.  Kleymeyer 
M.  d'I.  Lippincott 


J.  A.  Nickerson,  2d  S.  L.  Tait 

G.  F.  O'Brien  W.  E.  Vieth 

W.  E.  Stearns  Stephen  Webster 
Iv.  C.  Sutfhen 


i920 
P.  W.  Goodell  H.  W.  Hitzrot  F.  H.  Owen,  Jr. 

1921 
R.  P.  Crenshaw,  Jr. 


HONORARY  MEMBERS 

Mr.  Laurence  Murray  Crosbie 
Professor  Frank  William  Cushwa 
Dr.  John  Copeland  Kirtland 
Dr.  Arthur  Gordner  Leacock 
Mr.  Edwin  Victor  Spooner 
Professor  James  Arthur  Tufts 
Mr.  James  Plaisted  Webber 
Mr.  Frederick  Raymond  Whitman 


*Resigned 


133 


The  Golden  Branch 

1818 — F.s.T. — 1918 

THE  Golden  Branch  Society,  the  oldest  preparatory  school  literary  society  in  the  country, 
has  finished  its  first  century.  The  event  was  celebrated  by  a  dinner  on  February  twenty- 
first  and  a  chapel  service  on  the  following  day.  The  centennial  celebration  was,  of  course, 
much  curtailed,  because  of  the  war,  and  only  a  small  proportion  of  the  more  than  a  thousand 
living  alumni  could  be  present.  But  the  successful  outcome  of  the  celebration  left  little  to  be 
desired,  and  attested  well  to  the  energy  and  thought  put  on  it  by  Professor  Tufts  and  the  Golden 
Branch  Committee.  The  celebration  started  with  a  dinner  given  on  Washington's  Birthday  eve 
at  Alumni  Hall.  Professor  Tufts,  a  former  president  of  the  Golden  Branch,  presided.  The  speakers 
of  the  evening  were  Mr.  T.  W.  Lamont,  '88,  who  gave  his  impressions  of  a  recent  visit  to  England 
and  France;  Mr.  Merriam,  first  president  of  the  G.  L.  Soule,  who  spoke  on  the  friendly  relations 
between  the  two  societies,  R.  B.  Hamblett,  '17;  G.  I.  Lewis,  '05;  W.  C.  H.  Ramage,  '05,  and 
G.  E.  Evans,  '00.  Professor  Tufts  read  a  poem  written  for  the  occasion  by  Mr.  J.  F.  Merrill,  '78, 
also  greetings  from  several  alumni  associations  and  a  letter  from  Dr.  N.  E.  Soule,  '35. 

The  celebration  was  continued  in  chapel  the  next  morning  after  the  unfurling  of  the  Academy's 
service  flag.  Professor  Tufts  spoke  admirably  on  the  past  of  the  Golden  Branch,  giving  the  list 
of  its  original  members  and  of  its  most  distinguished  honorary  and  active  members.  The  subjects 
for  debates  in  the  early  years  of  the  society  and  in  his  own  day  created  much  amusement.  Mr. 
Tufts  also  read  extracts  from  the  memorial  volume  of  the  Golden  Branch  which  is  being  written 
by  A.  C.  Tilt-on,  '92.  With  unconscious  humor,  Professor  Tufts  remarked  that  some  of  the 
"fruits  of  the  Golden  Branch"'  would  then  be  exhibited,  and  called  on  Ta  Li,  '17,  and  J.  K.  Lena- 
han,  '18,  to  speak.  The  chapel  service  closed  a  successful  centennial  which  was  made  all  the  more 
momentous  by  the  many  other  significant  events  of  the  day,  especially,  the  unfurling  of  the 
service  flag  and  the  dedication  of  the  new  gymnasium. 

From  the  beginning  the  Golden  Branch  has  placed  special  emphasis  on  the  value  of  debating, 
interest  therein  stimulated  by  frequent  contests  with  the  sister  society,  founded  in  1881.  The 
two  societies  have  a  common  aim,  and  their  friendly  relations  are  those  of  generous  rivalry. 

The  Golden  Branch  is  believed  to  be  the  oldest  school  literary  society  in  the  country  of  con- 
tinuous existence  and  unbroken  records.  During  its  first,  century,  senators,  representatives, 
college  presidents,  professors,  governors,  ambassadors,  preachers,  and  other  leaders  of  the  nation 
spoke  their  first  broken  words  at  its  meetings.  Men  like  Phillips  Brooks,  Lewis  Cass,  Ralph 
Waldo  Emerson,  Edward  Everett,  Jared  Sparks,  Charles  Sumner,  Daniel  Webster,  and  John  G. 
Whittier,  some  of  them  members  of  the  Academy,  have  been  its  honorary  members.  The  Golden 
Branch  lias  done  a  mighty  service  Id  Ihe  nation  in  ils  first  century.  1-Oxcter  and  all  her  alumni 
wish  the  Golden  Branch  another  such  glorious  century  of  history.    Long  may  it  flourish! 

Debating 

AFTER  a  lapse  of  one  year  the  inter-society  debate  was  again  held.  The  G.  L.  Soule  with  the 
popular  side  of  the  question  took  revenge  on  the  Golden  Branch  for  occupying  the  lime- 
light with  a  centennial  celebration  by  winning  the  debate.  Several  weeks  later  the  G.  L. 
Soule  tried  to  rub  it  in  by  announcing  a  debate  by  the  "victorious  G.  L.  Soule  debating  team." 
The  Golden  Branch  in  May  came  back  by  overwhelmingly  defeating  the  G.  L.  Soule  in  the  annual 
baseball  game,  20  to  7.  The  expected  announcement  of  a  debate  by  the  victorious  Golden  Branch 
baseball  team  has  not  yet  appeared.  It  is  to  be  regretted  that  Andover  has  not  consented  to 
renew  the  forensic  battles  which  took  place  annually  for  the  ten  years  from  1906  to  1915.  Andover 
won  the  last  of  these  in  1915,  making  it  eight  victories  for  Exeter  to  two  for  Andover.  The  plan 
used  in  the  inter-society  debate,  and  used  in  many  colleges,  of  limiting  preparation  to  three  weeks 
or  less,  should  go  far  to  removing  some  of  the  former  objections.  This  plan  resulted  in  a  most 
interesting  and  instructive  debate,  for  which  both  teams  and  societies,  and  the  coaches,  Mr. 
Libby  and  Professor  Cushwa,  arc  to  be  congratulated. 


134 


Standing — Lamont,  Fordyce,  Huddleston. 
Sitting— -W.  M.  Pond. 

G.  L.  SOULE  DEBATING  TEAM 


Inter-Society  Debate 

Academy  Chapel,  April  1,  1918 

QUESTION 

"Resolved,  That  the  national  prohibition  amendment,  as  adopted  by  Congress,  should  be  ratified 
by  the  States." 


G.  L.  SOULE 
Affirmative 

C.  H.  Huddleston,  'IS 
Corliss  Lamont,  '20 
W.  M.  Pond,  '18,  Captain 
C.  P.  Fordyce,  '19,  Alternate 


Mr.  Theodore  W.  Moses 


GOLDEN   BRANCH 

Negative 

C.  B.  P.  Cobb,  '18 

N.  H.  Cotton,  '19 

R.  P.  Hoagland,  Jr.,  '18,  Captain 

A.  P.  Curran,  '20,  Alternate 


Judges 
Mr.  Henry  A.  Shute 
Decision  awarded  to  the  affirmative. 


Mr.  Harry  E.  Walker 


135 


Top  Row — Huddleston.  G.  W.  Chapman.  E.  A.  Smith,  Townsend,  W.  M.  Pond. 
Center  Row— Kehler,  Howland,  Fordyce,  R.  S.  Elliot,  Jr..  Garrick.  C.  M.  Wright. 
Bottom  Row — Reed,  Terry,  H.  O.  Chapman,  Tolles,  Lamont,  Birtwell,  Bonner. 

G.  L.  SOULE 


136 


Gj.  L,  Soulc 


OFFICERS 

Fall  Term  Winter  Term 

President C.  H.  Huddleston  B.  F.  Tolles 

Vice-President J.  H.  Terry  H.  O.  Chapman,  Jr. 

Secretary B.  F.  Tolles  Corliss  Lamont 

Treasurer Corliss  Lamont  H.  H.  Reed 

Librarian H.  H.  Reed  W.  J.  Bunnell 


Spring  Term 
H.  O.  Chapman,  Jr. 
C.  P.  Fordyce 
H.  H.  Reed 
W.  S.  Howland 
C.  M.  Wright 


MEMBERS 

1918 

Roger  Birtwell 

J. 

H.  Terry 

C.  H.  Huddleston 

B. 

F.  Tolles 

W.  M.  Pond 

. 

1919 

H.  0.  Chapman, 

Jr. 

H. 

F.  Garrick 

C.  T.  E.  DePuy, 

Jr. 

W 

S.  Howland 

C.  F.  Eaton,  Jr. 

L. 

W.  Lipscomb 

R.  S.  Elliot,  Jr. 

A. 

H.  C.  Ohse 

C.  P.  Fordyce 

H. 

H.  Reed 
1920 

J.  T.  Babb 

G. 

W.  Chapman 

D.  G.  Bonner 

G. 

M.  Kehler 
1921 

W.  U.  Roulette 

H. 

L.  Spooner 

C.  M.  Wright 
F.  E.  Wright 


C.  J.  Shearn,  Jr. 
R.  W.  Stevens 
G.  L.  P.  Stone,  Jr. 
G.  B.  Townsend,  Jr. 


Corliss  Lamont 
G.  W.  Plimpton 


HONORARY  MEMBERS 

Mr.  Corning  Benton 
Mr.  Daniel  Downs  Chase 
Mr.  Joseph  Sherman  Ford 
Professor  William  Allen  Francis 
Mr.  Fletcher  Nichols  Robinson 
Mr.  George  Benjamin  Rogers 
Mr.  George  Henry  Selleck 
Rev.  William  Emery  Soule 


137 


Merrill  Lecture  Course,  1917-18 

December  12 Francis  Wilson 

"The  Humorous  Side  of  an  Actor's  Life" 

January  10 John  I.  Solomon 

"The  Romance  of  Pearl  Fishing" 

January  16 Arthur  Delroy 

"A  Psychic  Melange" 

January  23 Hon.  William  H.  Taft 

"The  Great  War" 

January  30 Donald  B.  MacMillan 

"The  Search  for  New  Land" 

February  6 Lincoln  Wirt 

"Our  Little  Brothers  in  Fur" 

February  13      George  N.  Cross 

"David  Lloyd  George" 


February  27 


Captain  A.  Radclyffe  Dugmore 


"Fighting  It  Out" 


Merrill  Prize  Speaking 


TWENTY-FIRST  ANNUAL  CONTEST,  ACADEMY  CHAPEL,  JUNE  23,  1917 

COMPOSITIONS 
First  Prize,  " Rire  de  Dieu" I.  L.  Gavit,  1917,  Englewood,  N.  J. 

Second  Prize,  " International  Problems  Confronting  the  United  Stales  from  17.98  to  1812  and   Those 
of  the  Present  War" W.  McD.  Pond,  1919,  Torrington,  Conn. 

Honorable  Mention J.  J.  Sack,  1918,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Judges  of  Composition 

Prof.  A.  E.  Richards   ) 

Mr.  H.  S.  Scudder        >■    New  Hampshire  College 

Mr.  L.  W.  Crafts         ) 

DECLAMATIONS 

First  Prize,  "The  American  Flag  and  the  World  War  " — Wilson 

W.  McD.  Pond,  1918,  Torrington,  Conn. 

Second  Prize,  "The  Parson's  Son,"— Service    ....         J.  H.  Terry,  1918,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

Judges  of  Declamation 

Prof.  F.  J.  E.  Woodbridge,  Columbia  University 
Mr.  Douglas  Alexander,  Stamford,  Conn. 
Mr.  H.  E.  Walker,  Exeter 


138 


Prize  Awards,  June,  1917 


Announced  at  the  commencement  exercises  on  June  26,  1917 


THE  PRIZE   FOR  GENERAL  EXCEL- 
LENCE       Chester  D.  Perry,  '17 

Honorable  Mention  Hung-chen  Chen,  '17 

THE  MERRILL  PRIZES  IN  ENGLISH 

COMPOSITION First  Joseph  L.  Gavit,  '17 

Second  William  McD.  Pond,  '18 

Honorable  Mention  John  J.  Sack,  '18 

THE  MERRILL  PRIZES  IN  DECLAMA- 
TION      First  William  McD.  Pond,  '18 

Second  James  H.  Terry,  '18 

THE  WENTWORTH  MATHEMATICAL 

PRIZES First  Henry  D.  Tucker,  '18 

Second  Cecil  C.  Cole,  '18 

Third  Rowland  W.  Berkeley,  '18 

THE  HENRY  JUDSON  HOOPER  ME- 
MORIAL PRIZE Everett  W.  Sweezy,  '18 

THE  HENRY  L.  MASON  LATIN  PRIZE James  M.  Weil,  '18 

Honorable  Mention  Leonard  Wheeler,  Jr.,  '18 

THE   NORMAN   F.    GREELEY   LATIN 

PRIZE Leonard  Wheeler,  Jr.,  '18 

Honorable  Mention  Joseph  F.  Scott,  '17 

THE  BLACKMAR  HISTORY  PRIZES 

For  the  best  ivork  in  Advanced  American 

History . James  Sidway,  '17 

Honorable  Mention  Charles  M.  Kritzman,  '17 
For  the  greatest  improvement  in  Advanced 

American  History Thomas  H.  Argue,  '17 

THE    MODERN    HISTORY    PRIZE   OF 

THE  CLASS  OF  1891 Hung-chen  Chen,  '17 


139 


THE  YALE  CUP      Herbert  G.  Notes,  '17 

THE  PRIZE  OF  THE  NEW  ENGLAND 

FEDERATION  OF  HARVARD  CLUBS  . Charles  P.  Holmes,  '18 

THE       WESTERFIELD        AMERICAN 

HISTORY  PRIZE John  J.  Sack,  '18 

THE   PRENTISS   CUMMINGS   GREEK 

PRIZES Senior  Francis  T.  P.  Plimpton,  '17 

Second  Prizes  John  Cowles,  '17 

Frederick  J.  Woodbridge,  '17 
Upper  Middle  George  E.  Darling,  '18 

Honorable  Mention  Crawford  Johnson,  '18 
Lower  Middle  William  S.  Howland,  '19 

Second  Leonard  B.  Marshall,  '18 

THE    NATHANIEL    GORDON    BIBLE 
PRIZES 

In  the  Course  in  the  Life  of  St.  Paul Lawrence  W.  Conant,  '17 

John  J.  Sack,  '18 

In  the  Lower  Middle  Course Don  I.  R.  P.  Morrissey,  '20 

In  the  Junior  Course James  H.  Lang,  Jr.,  '20 

Karl  Moser,  '20 

THE  MARSHALL  NEWELL  PRIZE John  H.  Bradley,  Jr.,  '17 

THE  PITTS  DUFFIELD  PRIZE John  J.  Sack,  '18 

THE     FRANK     B.     STEVENS     LATIN 

PRIZE Chester  D.  Perry,  '17 

TESCHEMACHER  SCHOLARSHIPS  (For  members  of  the  Senior  Class  going  to  Harvard,  two 
hundred  and  fifty  dollars  annually  for  four  years)  C.  D.  Perry,  '17,  William  Eldridge,  '16, 
Hung-chen  Chen,  '17. 

SCHOLARSHIP  AID.— On  the  closing  day  of  the  Fall  Term,  December  20,  1916,  sixty-nine 
students  were  awarded  one  hundred  and  seventeen  scholarships  amounting  to  a  total  of 
•114,500.  A  few  additional  scholarships  were  assigned  at  the  end  of  the  winter  and  spring  terms. 


140 


141 


Top  Row — D.  H.  McConnell.  Jr.,  Howland. 

Second  Row—R.  P.  Bullard.  Goodell,  Cole,  Sack. 

Third  Row—R.  S.  Elliot,  C.  Johnson,  H.  R.  Davis,  Bathgate,  Stearns. 

Bollom  Row — Lamont,  Rowley,  Hurst,  Webster,  Love,  Reed. 


Exonian  Board 


Editor-in-Chief Stephen  Webster,  '18,*  A,  L.  Hurst,  '18 

Business  Manager F.  H.  Rowley,  '20 

Managing  Editor      A.  L.  Hurst, 'IS,*  G.  H.  Love, '18 

Secretary G.  H.  Love,  '18,*  C.  C.  Cole,  'IS 

Assignment  Editor C.  C.  Cole,  '18,*  J.  E.  Bathgate,  3d,  'IS 

Assistant  Business  Managers,  E.  C.  Bonnell,  '18*,  G.  W.  Chapman,  "20,  H.  R.  Davis,  '19,  J.  P. 
Gilmore,  '18,  D.  H.  McConnell,  '20,  W.  F.  Thayer,  '19*,  G.  B.  Townsend,  Jr.,  '19 

Associate  Editors 

J.  E.  Bathgate,  3d,  '18  Crawford  Johnson,  '18  J.  J.  Sack,  '18 

R.  P.  Bullard,  '20  Corliss  Lamont,  '20  W.  E.  Stearns,  'ID 

R.  S.  Elliot,  Jr.,  '19  Thomas  Oxnard,  '18*  A.  B.  Stoddard,  '19* 

P.  W.  Goodell,  '20  A.  A.  Phinney,  '20  W.  E.  Vieth,  '19* 

W.  S.  Howland,  '19  H.  H.  Reed,  '19 
♦Resigned 


142 


The  Exonian 


THE  Exonian,  the  oldest  preparatory  school  newspaper  in  the  country,  began  its  career  in 
the  spring  of  1878  as  a  weekly.     The  editors  who  successfully  launched  it  were  Mariett, 
Balch,  and  Needles.    The  paper  has  grown  steadily.    In  September,  1888,  it  changed  to  a 
semi-weekly  and  in  January,  1915,  the  page  was  enlarged  to  the  present  size. 

During  the  present  year  the  Exonian  passed  through  one  of  the  most  difficult  periods  in  its 
history.  The  increased  cost  of  paper  and  printing,  without  a  corresponding  increase  in  the  num- 
ber of  subscriptions  and  advertisements  and  in  spite  of  the  raising  of  the  subscription  price  from 
$2.50  to  $3.00,  made  it  seem  advisable  to  make  the  paper  weekly  instead  of  semi-weekly.  This 
was  done  for  the  winter  term  only,  however,  for  when  the  financial  sky  suddenly  seemed  to  clear, 
perhaps  due  to  the  economy  effected  by  the  reduction,  the  Exonian  became  again  a  semi- 
weekly.  It  is  fair  to  say  that  two  larger  issues,  one  of  six  pages  and  the  other  of  eight,  were  printed 
during  the  winter  term.  The  Exonian  board  with  the  aid  of  its  printers  did  a  remarkable  feat  of 
journalism  in  the  fall  by  having  a  special  edition  for  sale  with  a  full  account  of  the  Andover  foot- 
ball game  twenty  minutes  after  the  game  was  over.  Twice  the  number  printed  could  have  been 
sold,  for  the  edition  of  600  copies  was  sold  in  half  an  hour.  In  the  spring  term  a  desirable  innova- 
tion was  instituted  by  the  addition  of  a  column  of  war  news.  The  Exonian  maintains  an  enviable 
position  among  publications  of  its  kind  and  it  is  with  a  deep  appreciation  of  good  work  performed 
that  the  Pean  congratulates  its  editorial  board  on  the  successful  surmounting  of  unusual  diffi- 
culties. Realizing  that  the  Exonian  is  not  only  one  of  the  most  worth-while  and  educational 
extra-curriculum  activities  of  the  school,  but  also  a  factor  in  putting  Exeter  in  the  highest  rank  of 
schools,  we  extend  to  the  Exonian  our  best  wishes  for  the  continuance  of  its  success  undiminished 
in  the  coming  years. 


143 


Editors  of  the  Exontan 


In  Order  of  Election 


E.  H.  Mariett,  78 

T. 

S.  Childs,  '87 

C. 

F.  Crapo,  '94 

E.  B.  Balch,  79 

YV 

C.  Wurtenberg,  '86 

C. 

I.  Wright,  '94 

W.  N.  Needles,  Jr.,  '80 

M 

W.  Mather,  '86 

J. 

A.  Love,  '94 

A.  A.  Wyman,  79 

p. 

H.  Tracy,  '87 

L. 

P.  Adams,  '95 

W.  C.  Baylies,  'SO 

C. 

LeB.  Withrow,  '86 

C. 

H.  Geils,  '95 

F.  B.  Fay,  '80 

A. 

Lee,  '87 

F. 

P.  Hull,  '96 

G.  N.  P.  Mead,  '81 

C. 

B.  Hurst,  '87 

E. 

C.  Buck,  '95 

M.  H.  Cushing,  79 

W 

.  J.  Farquhar,  '87 

St 

.  John  Courtenay',  '95 

L.  E.  Sexton,  '80 

s. 

P.  Ddffield,  '88 

P. 

M.  Watson,  '95 

C.  A.  Strong,  '81 

T. 

W.  Lamont,  '88 

G. 

R.  Stobbs,  '95 

C.  E.  Hamlin,  '80 

C. 

F.  Clarkson,  '88 

W 

S.  Bradford,  '96 

H.  L.  Dawes,  Jr.,  'SO 

VY 

F.  Baker    '89 

W 

R.  A.  Hays,  '96 

G.  R.  Parsons,  '82 

S. 

M.  Brice,  '89 

J. 

E.  Benton,  '96 

F.  A.  Aldrich,  '81 

R. 

FURMAN,    '90 

D. 

G.  Stark,  '96 

II .  Osgood,  '82 

P. 

S.  Skeele,  '90 

F. 

E.  Bissell,  '96 

W.  M.  Hall,  Jr.,  '82 

II 

Oliver,  '90 

R. 

W.  Sawyer,  Jr.,  '98 

R.  P.  Winters,  '83 

B. 

C.  DeWolf,  '91 

H. 

F.  Cameron,  '97 

J.  F.  Holland,  '81 

A. 

P.  Lord,  '89 

S. 

Lydecker,  '97 

J.  A.  Ordway,  Jr.,  '82 

F. 

J.  Carr,  '90 

H. 

L.  Langnecker,  '98 

J.  A.  Hill,  '81 

H. 

C.    MlNTON,    '91 

E. 

W.  James,  '97 

H.  H.  Wentworth,  '82 

G. 

M.  Leventritt,  '91 

s. 

J.  Beach,  '97 

E.  I.  K.  Noyes,  '82 

E. 

M.    G ROVER,    '90 

V. 

H.  Roberts,  '98 

W.    W.    COLBtTRN,    '81 

R, 

J.  Bardwell,  '90 

E. 

E.  Franchot,  '98 

J.  Codman,  '81 

L. 

McKee,  '91 

W 

E.  Reese,  '98 

C.  F.  Clement,  '83 

E. 

M.  Stothers,  '90 

R. 

C.  Bruce,  '98 

W.  C.  Smith,  '81 

C. 

A.  Kimball,  '91 

C. 

M.  Cochran,  '99 

C.  C.  Felton,  '82 

K. 

W.  Strong,  '92 

H. 

W.  Hahn,  '99 

W.  W.  Baldwin,  '82 

A. 

W.  Cooke,  '91 

F. 

R.  Sears,  '98 

W.  K.  Barton,  '82 

E. 

C.  H.  Jones,  '91 

W 

B.  Weston,  '99 

G.  E.  Bales,  '83 

II. 

H.  Thayer,  Jr..  '92 

L. 

V.  V.  Banker,  '99 

W.  C.  Boyden,   '82 

T. 

C.  Clarke,  Jr.,  '93 

R. 

W.  Varney,  '00 

F.  H.  Stan y an,  '83 

H. 

S.  Colton,  '92 

G 

Owen,  '99 

T.  R.  Varick,  '83 

A. 

H.  Whitney,  '92 

M 

E.  Bessell,  '99 

C.  S.  Elgutter,  '83 

A. 

J.  Draper,  '93 

P. 

Shaffrath,  '00 

W.  H.  Rand,  Jr.,  '85 

C. 

L.  Hayden,  '92 

W 

A.  Wolfe,  '99 

B.  W.  Palmer,  '84 

s. 

I.  Tonjoroff,  '93 

E. 

T.  Eshelman,  '00 

J.  M.  Peters,  '84 

p. 

Rand,  '93 

W 

A.  Green,  '00 

L.  Anderson,  '84 

p. 

P.  S.  Doane,  '93 

F. 

C.  Fairbanks,  '00 

L.  Honore,  '84 

E. 

R.  Mathews,  '92 

O. 

L.  GlBBS,  '00 

J.  T.  Malone,  '85 

F. 

J.  Mahoney,  '93 

A. 

R.  Sawyer,  '01 

E.  C.  Bates,  '85 

A. 

Scott,  '93 

A. 

C.  Travis,  '01 

H.  D.  Everett,  '85 

F. 

Merrill,  '94 

L. 

H.  Egan,  '00 

E.  0.  Mitchell,  '85 

W 

D.  Freeman,  '94 

H. 

Otis,  '00 

114 


W.  L.  Dougherty,  '01 

E.  H.  Putnam,  '01 
M.  B.  Sands,  '02 
W.  W.  Manton,  '01 

S.  M.  Harrington,  '02 
J.  A.  Lamprey,  '03 
G.  C.  Forster,  '03 
L.  A.  Andrus,  '02 

F.  C.  Irving,  '02 

A.  B.  Maine,  '03 

L.  M.  Humrichouse,  '05 
W.  G.  Davis,  Jr.,  '03 

B.  H.  B.  Draper,  '03 

J.    C.    DONNALLY,    '03 

R.  C.  Latimer,  '03 

A.  T.  Spring,  '04 

B.  J.  Carr,  '04 

C.  M.  Brownlow,  '04 

A.  A.  Dawley,  '05 

C.  G.  Bamberger,  '04 

C.  V.  Putnam,  '05 
R.  C.  Mason,  '05 

G.  Blanchard,  '05 
R.  Grozier,  '05 
G.  I.  Lewis,  '05 

B.  B.  Sanderson,  '05 
R.  C.  Mulligan,  '05 

F.  F.  Randolph,  '07 
J.  J.  Hiatt,  '06 

W.  A.  Lochren,  '07 

R.  B.  Strassburger,  '06 

E.  L.  Hazelton,  '06 

G.  W.  Anson,  '06 
H.  C.  Long,  '06 
V.  S.  Shear,  '06 

C.  M.  D'Autremont,  '07 
H.  H.  D'Autremont,  '07 
N.  W.  Gillette,  '08 

D.  L.  Krebs,  '07 

D.  A.  Heald,  '08 
H.  S.  Goldey,  '08 
H.  C.  Hickman,  '08 

G.  B.  Cortelyou,  Jr.,  '09 

E.  W.  Houston,  Jr.,  '08 
W.  A.  Peck,  '08 

P.  T.  Hazelton,  '08 
S.  M.  Morison,  '09 
C.  H.  Weston,  '09 
W.  S.  Bacon,  '10 


N.  C.  Hyde,  '09 

W.  B.  McConnel,  '15 

D.    J.    P.    WlNGATE,    '10 

F.  K.  Bullard,  '15 

M.  P.  Noyes,  '10 

H.  C.  Humphrey,  '16 

F.  L.  Gross,  '10 

A.  J.  Connell,  '16 

J.  A.  Henderson,  '10 

S.  P.  McConnel,  '16 

H.  C.  Wilder,  '10 

R.  S.  Clapp,  '15 

G.  S.  Couper,  '10 

S.  C.  Richmond,  '17 

F.  P.  Eyman,  '10 

M.  E.  Bacon,  '16 

L.  S.  Zartman,  '11 

R.  F.  Finley,  '16 

W.  G.  Borah,  '11 

J.  Cowles,  '17 

B.  Forman,  '12 

F.  T.  P.  Plimpton,  '17 

S.  Bonsal,  Jr.,  '12 

P.  H.  Page,  '17 

W.  S.  Thomas,  '11 

C.  H.  Judson,  '17 

D.  O.  Stewart,  '12 

C.  S.  Hill,  '17 

W.  W.  Demelman,  '12 

H.  D.  Costigan,  '16 

A.  F.  Brann,  '11 

B.  H.  Tracy,  Jr.,  '16 

C.  C.  Smith,  '11 

J.  E.  Riddock,  '17 

G.  Lamont,  '12 

C.  F.  Judson,  Jr.,  '19 

D.  West,  '12 

F.  D.  Rice,  '17 

S.  M.  Foster,  '12 

S.  Webster,  '18 

J.  W.  Massie,  '12 

G.  H.  Love,  '18 

R.  F.  Scott,  Jr.,  '12 

E.  B.  Meyer,  '17 

W.  F.  Smith,  '13 

E.    C.    BONNELL,    '17 

G.  Dougherty,  '14 

C.  C.  Cole,  '18 

A.  J.  Greenfield,  '13 

A.  B.  Stoddard,  '19 

S.  W.  Atkins,  '13 

G.  L.  Frost,  '17 

J.  F.  Sutherland,  '13 

W.  D.  Litt,  '17 

H.  H.  Neuberger,  '13 

A.  L.  Hurst,  '18 

H.  M.  Heywood,  '13 

J.    P.    GlLMORE,    '18 

C.  E.  Pieper,  '14 

J.  E.  Bathgate,  '18 

S.  W.  Price,  '14 

H.  H.  Reed,  '19 

O.  Adams,  Jr.,  '14 

W.  S.  Howland,  '19 

W.  A.  Collins,  '14 

F.  H.  Rowley,  '19 

R.  G.  Moore,  '14 

G.  B.  Townsend,  Jr., 

C.  B.  Wrightsman,  '14 

C.  Lamont,  '20 

J.  J.  Dempsey,  '14 

P.  W.  Goodell,  '20 

H.  H.  Bechtel,  '13 

W.  E.  Vieth,  '19 

R.  Radford,  '14 

D.  H.  McConnell,  'IS 

J.  T.  Walker,  '14 

W.  F.  Thayer,  '18 

R.  E.  O'Donovan,  '14 

J.  J.  Sack,  '18 

J.  N.  Whipple,  '15 

T.  Oxnard,  '18 

Y.  Rice,  '15 

H.  R.  Davis,  '19 

R.  E.  Seward,  '15 

R.  S.  Elliot,  Jr.,  '19 

H.  P.  Perry,  '15 

W.  E.  Stearns,  '19 

D.  A.  Carson,  '14 

R.  P.  Bullard,  '20 

J.  C.  Milne,  2d,  '15 

A.  A.  Phinney,  '20 

B.  Strong,  3d,  '15 

G.  W.  Chapman,  '20 

T.  S.  Lamont,  '16 

C.  Johnson,  '18 

'19 


145 


Top  Rota — C.  P.  Holmes,  MacKaye,  Curtis,  Goodell. 

Bottom  Row — Day,  Whedon,  T.  E.  Jones,  Sack,  Lamont,  Mclnerney. 

Monthly  Board 

Editor-ir^-Chief I.  J.  Sack,  Ms 

Managing  Editor      S.  H.  Whedon,  '20 

Secretary Corliss  Lamont,  '20 

Business  Manager T.  E.  Jones,  'IS 

Assistant  Business  Manager C.  P.  Holmes    '18 

C.  A.  Stonehill,  Jr.,  '19 

L.  P.  Brown,  '20* 

Second  Assistant  Business  Manager P.  C.  C.  McInerney,  '20 

Associate  Editors 

J.  G.  Curtis,  '18  C.  L.  Day,  '18  P.  W.  Goodell,  '20  R.  K.  MacKaye,  '19 

*Resigned 

The  Monthly 

THROUGHOUT  the  past  year,  Ihe  Monthly  lias  maintained  the  high  standard  which  has 
given  it  a  place  among  the  foremost  school  publications  of  its  kind.    A  comparison  even 
with  college  publications  throws  no  discredit  upon  either  the  appearance  of  the  magazine 
or  the  literary  quality  of  its  contents.    The  suspension  of  a  publication  like  the  Monthly  would 
have,  undoubtedly,  reacted  against  the  school.     Because  of  the  financial  deficit  suffered  by  the 
previous  board,  and  the  fact  that  only  one  editor  returned  at  the  beginning  of  the  year,  the  outlook 


I  hi 


PBM 


was  discouraging,  to  say  the  least,  for  the  continuance  of  publication.  The  Monthly,  which  started 
as  the  Phillips  Exeter  Literary  Monthly  in  May,  1886,  has  had  its  trials  before.  In  1898  its  name 
changed  to  Ye  Lit  of  Ye  Phillips  Exeter  Academic,  but  at  the  end  of  the  school  year  the  magazine 
stopped  publication  and  was  not  revived  until  nine  years  later,  in  1907,  under  the  present  name. 

To  stop  publication  again  would  possibly  have  meant  another  lapse  of  nine  years.  With 
aggressiveness  and  at  personal  sacrifice  and  with  the  unselfish  devotion  of  Professor  Cushwa  1o 
the  Monthly's  interests  and  with  Dr.  Perry's  help,  the  new  board  prospered  in  its  subscription 
campaign  and  succeeded  by  the  end  of  the  year  not  only  in  filling  its  pages  with  carefully  selected 
literary  matter,  but  also  in  coming  out  well  in  its  finances,  and  in  the  creation  of  a  full  board  for 
the  coming  year.  As  a  matter  of  economy  the  number  of  issues  were  cut  to  two  a  term*  but  the 
larger  number  of  pages  per  issue  almost  compensated  for  this  reduction.  Not  only  has  the  board 
itself  striven  to  make  the  Monthly  a  success,  but  an  encouraging  number  of  fellows  have  taken  an 
active  interest  by  contributing  short  stories  and  poems  which  have  added  interest  and  variety 
to  its  contents.  Credit  is  due  to  Lamont,  Goodell,  Whedon,  and  Sack,  and  especially  to  Professor 
Cushwa,  for  their  unstinted  efforts  in  making  the  Monthly  the  success  it  has  been  this  year,  and  in 
making  it  possible  for  the  Monthly  next  fall  to  return  to  nine  issues  a  year. 


Editors  of  the  Monthly 


R.  C.  Benchley,  '08 
G.  L.  Buck,  '08 

M.    W.    BURLINGAME,    '08 

H.  S.  Goldey,  '08 

D.  W.  Houston,  '08 
N.  C.  Hyde,  '09 

P.  H.  Kruschwitz,  '09 
G.  S.  Phenix,  '08 

F.  L.  Samuels,  '09 
H.  W.  Wesman,  '10 
M.  F.  Jones,  '09 

W.  C.  Spaulding,  '09 
M.  M.  Rothstein,  '10 
P.  C.  Stetson,  '10 

E.  P.  Radford,  '10 
H.  Danziger,  '09 

G.  T.  Wisner,  '09 
G.  M.  Fuller,  '10 
H.  Aston,  '11 

M.  P.  Noyes,  TO 
W.  C.  Spencer,  '11 
J.  F.  Weintz,  '11 
A.  T.  Foster,  TO 
L.  J.  Rabbette,  TO 
J.  C.  Hughes,  TO 
K.  McIntosh,  TO 
L.  P.  Faulkner,  '11 
W.  Bright,  '11 
G.  G.  Emmons,  '12 
H.  W.  Haggard,  '11 
M.  A.  Gillis,  '12 
E.  S.  A.  Robinson,  '12 
T.  O.  Reavill,  '13 


'12 


In  Order  of  Election 
W.  R.  Turner,  '12 
C.  R.  Walker,  Jr. 
J.  A.  Downs,  '13 
H.  P.  Putnam,  '12 

C.  H.  Jacobs,  '12 
H.  W.  Porter,  '13 
R.  G.  Nathan,  '12 
J.  Rippenbein,  '14 
S.  Baldwin,  '13 

N.  P.  Johnson,  '13 
M.  Anderson    '14 
R.  Roelofs,  Jr.,  '15 
J.  K.  Hoyt,  '13 

L.    E.    BULLARD,    '13 

R.  N.  Cram,  '13 
A.  Putnam,  '14 
L.  A.  Gimbel,  '15 
W.  Williams,  '15 
M.  L.  Gerstle,  Tfi 

D.  M.  Brunswick,  '14 
A.  B.  Shattuck,  Jr.,  '14 
L.  E.  Thayer,  '14 

L.    HlGGINS,    '14 

L.  E.  Este,  '17 

R.  E.  O'Donovan,  '14 

L.  P.  Hollander,  '16 

J.  H.  Hall,  '15 

R.  F.  Cleveland,  '15 

J.  L.  Gavit,  '17 

R.  L.  Buell,  T5 

F.  A.  Burwell,  '16 

E.  A.  Stern,  '15 


A.  R.  Pearson,  '15 

C.  N.  Vilas,  '15 
A.  R.  Lake,  '17 

F.  T.  P.  Plimpton,  '17 
R.  Hilton,  '17 

H.  M.  Nevin,  '18* 

D.  A.  Turnure,  '17 
R.  C.  Campbell,  '17 

G.  S.  Mott,  '17 

J.  E.  Chilton,  '17* 

C.  P.  Holmes,  '17 

H.  F.  Manchester,  '17 

L.  M.  Pearson,  '17 

H.  D.  Costigan,  '17 

J.  Cowles,  '17 

J.  E.  Mitchell,  '17 

R.  Chase,  '17 

C.  Lamont,  '20 

J.  A.  Morgan,  '18 

J.  Foster,  'IS 

T.  E.  Jones,  '18 

W.  R,  Forster,  '17 

J.  H.  Bradley,  Jr..  '17 

J.  J.  Sack,  '18 

C.  A.  Stonehill,  Jr.,  '19 

S.  H.  Whedon,  '20 

L.  P.  Brown,  '20 

P.  W.  Goodell,  '20 

R.  K.  MacKaye,  '19 

J.  G.  Curtis,  '18 

P.  C.  C.  McInerney,   '20 

C.  L.  Day,  '18 


147 


1  w^^ 

I  ».  ^ur 

THE  PEAN  BOARD 


148 


The  Pcan 


BACK  somewhere  in  the  Dark  Ages,  to  be  more  exact  in  1880,  some  unfeeling  heathen  started 
the  custom  of  publishing  an  annual  of  the  Phillips  Exeter  Academy.  How  many  con- 
stitutions he  has  destroyed  and  lives  he  has  wrecked  we  cannot  venture  to  say,  but  just 
about  this  stage  of  the  game,  when  the  Pean  is  on  the  press,  we  feel  the  utmost  sympathy  for 
everyone  who  has  ever  been  connected  with  the  Pean  as  an  editor. 

A  history  of  the  1918  Pean  may  be  interesting.  As  early  as  May,  1917,  we  needed  little 
urging  to  convince  us  of  the  need  for  a  different  Pean.  The  former  Peans  were  good,  but  somehow 
or  other  a  stereoptyped  form  had  been  developed,  just  as  if  the  point  of  perfection  had  been 
reached.  This  sameness  in  an  annual  from  year  to  year  is  contrary  to  the  policy  of  every  college 
annual  board,  for  these  feel  that  their  duty  is  not  done  unless  an  annual  is  produced  better  than 
the  preceding  year  or  at  least  different  in  appearance.  If  the  hundreds  of  hours  spent  in  plan- 
ning the  1918  Pean  have  been  of  avail,  this  book  will  succeed  both  in  being  better  and  in  being 
different.    We  hope  at  least  that  we  have  succeeded  in  establishing  a  precedent  for  future  boards. 

Our  planning  was  based  on  the  principle  of  no  profits,  expenses  to  balance  the  expected 
receipts.  Our  subscription  campaign  was  so  successful  that  we  could  afford  to  add  features  over 
and  above  what  we  had  promised.  We  dare  to  reprint  the  promises  on  our  subscription  blank  for 
comparison  with  the  book  itself: 

The  igi8  Pean  will  have  everything  the  former  Peans  have  had.  PLUS: 

i  Larger  size  page,  conforming  to  college  standard.  2  Rearrangement  entire  volume  into  six  separate  "books. "  3  Six 
color  inserts.  4  Special  colored  border  every  page.  5  Sixteen  page  section  in  sepia  of  school  buildings.  6  Ten  pages  to 
faculty — individual  pictures.  7  Double  the  area  to  each  individual  picture — and  larger  group  pictures.  8  War  time  features — 
dedication,  and  special  battalion  section,  etc.  9  Entire  school  picture — 24x5 — alphabetical  and  numerical  index.  10  Double 
the  usual  number  of  snapshots,  n  The  PEAL.  And  other  changes.  Yet  the  price  of  the  cloth  edition  has  not  been  increased,  and 
the  price  of  the  De  Luxe  is  lower  than  it  has  ever  been.  The  DeLuxe  binding  will  be  more  durable  than  in  previous  years.  The 
DeLuxe  edition  will  be  limited.    A  successful  advertising  campaign  is  paying  for  these  changes  and  additions. 

The  war  has  restrained  us  from  adding  more  features.  As  a  matter  of  fact  some  of  the  above 
changes  were  made  without  any  increase  in  cost,  others  will  save  future  boards  considerable 
expense,  and  pre-war  contracts,  good  business  management,  and  careful  planning,  have  kept 
expenses  on  new  features  down  to  a  minimum.  The  most  expensive  features  are  to  be  paid  for  by 
increased  advertising  and  the  usual  margin  for  editors'  profits,  all  of  which  we  planned  to  spend 
on  the  book  itself.  If,  in  spite  of  ourselves,  the  year  ends  with  a  profit  (little  fear  of  this  is  enter- 
tained, however),  some  sanatorium  for  the  over-worked  will  probably  get  the  lion's  share. 

Hours  upon  hours  have  been  spent  by  editors  and  heelers  to  get  every  record  and  name  in 
this  book  correct.  The  revision  of  some  records  which  have  stood  for  years  has  been  made 
with  the  aid  of  members  of  the  faculty  and  others.  We  have  done  our  best.  But  still  we  urge 
upon  those  who  follow  us  to  use  this  book  only  as  a  precedent  for  improvement  and  not  as  volume 
one  of  a  new  stereotyped  series. 


Clement  B.  P.  Cobb 

Associate  Editor 

Carrol  Hyde  Htjddleston 

Managing  Editor 

Robert  Groat  Johnson* 
Business  Manager 
*Resigned 


The  Pean  Board 

Bryant  Franklin  Tolles 

Assistant  Business  Manager 

John  Jacob  Sack 

Editor-in-Chief 
Business  Manager 
Darwin  Reidpath  Martin 
Art  Editor 


James  Hendrick  Terry',  Jr. 

Associate  Editor 

William  S locum  Howland 

Secretary 

William  Claypool  Bennett* 

Assistant  Business  Manager 


149 


Pcan  Editors 


In  Order  of  Election 


VOL.  I,   1880 

L.  E.  Sexton,  '80 

Others  not  published 

VOL.  II,  1881 
J.  Codman  C.  G.  Parker 

M.  M.  Taylor  J.  A.  Merrill 

W.  W.  Colburn  C.  C.  Felton 

D.  H.  McAlpin,  Jr. 

VOL.  Ill,  1884 
A.  F.  Holden  J.  M.  Peters 

P.  W.  Palmer  H.  L.  Mason 

L.  Anderson  F.  P.  Clement 

VOL.  IV,  1885 
T.  Woodbury  T.  S.  Tailer 

J.  D.  Denegre  J.  M.  Marvin 

VOL.  V,  1886 
Names  not  published 

VOL.  VI,  1887 

C.  H.  Hall  C.  P.  Hurst 

L.  D.  Orrison  A.  Lee 

R.  P.  Huntington,  Jr. 

VOL.  VII,  1888 

S.    P.    DuFFIELD  T.    W.    LAMONT 

J.  Smith,  Jr.  C.  F.  Clarkson 

W.  P.  Franklin 

VOL.  VIII,  1891 
G.  M.  Leventritt       H.  C.  Minton 
A.  W.  Cooke  H.  H.  Hayner 

VOL.  IX,  1892 
R.  H.  Thayer,  Jr.       M.  D.  McKee 
C.  D.  Booth  J.  F.  Barrett 

A.  M.  Hervey 

VOL.  X,  1893 

A.  K.  Moe  F.  W.  Johnston 

A.  C.  Brent 


VOL.  XI,  1894 
R.  D.  Brackett  H.  E.  Baumer 

L.  H.  Sharp 

VOL.  XII,  1895 
C.  H.  Geils  H.  C.  Houck 

S.  Gilman  L.  P.  Adams 

G.  R.  Stobbs 

VOL.  XIII,  1897 
W.  H.  Rurgess  D.  H.  Hayden 

H.  M.  Gittings  B.  Z.  Kasson 

G.  G.  Whitcomb 

VOL.  XIV,  1898 
A.  J.  Zimmer  R.  W.  Sawyer,  Jr. 

G.  T.  W.  Leavitt        P.  Bartlett 

VOL.  XV,  1899 
W.  C.  Cleveland        W.  B.  Weston 
F.  B.  Faulkner  L.  V.  V.  Banker 

E.  C.  Conner 

VOL.  XVI,  1900 
J.  Lang,  Jr.  W.  H.  Humrichouse 

H.  S.  Bigelow  H.  Otis 

R.  W.  Varney 

VOL.  XVII,  1901 

E.  H.  Putnam  E.  T.  Eshelman 

F.  H.  Haskell  W.  W.  Manton 

A.  C.  Travis 

VOL.  XVIII,  1902 
F.  G.  B.  Kemp  W.  Z.  Carr 

L.  A.  Andrus  K.  N.  Avery 

S.  M.  Harrington 

VOL.  XIX,  1903 
W.  G.  Davis,  Jr.  J.  M.  Frank 

A.  B.  Maine  A.  E.  Rand 

S.  A.  Marx 


150 


VOL.  XX,  1904 
E.  D.  Heim  C.  M.  Brownlow 

S.  C.  Godfrey  W.  H.  Kline 

A.  A.  Royce 

VOL.  XXI,  1905 
G.  I.  Lewis  M.  R.  Scharff 

L.  Godchatjx  W.  C.  H.  Ramage 

G.  G.  Flory*  R.  S.  Hoar 

VOL.  XXII,  1906 

W.  G.  T.  Fernandez    J.  J.  Hiatt 
A.  T.  Nabstedt  S.  A.  Francis 

D.  R.  Robbins*  T.  C.  Coffin 

VOL.  XXIII,  1907 

E.  S.  Wheelan  D.  L.  Krebs 
S.  Jacobs  B.  W.  Scharff 

F.  F.  Randolph*  C.  G.  Robertson 

VOL.  XXIV,  1908 

R.  H.  Royce  C.  D.  Newell 

I.  R.  Boody  F.  Holmes 

D.  A.  Heald  G.  D.  Greey 

W.  E.  Guthrie*  M.   W.   Burlingame 

VOL.  XXV,  1909 
P.  H.  Kruschwitz       F.  J.  Grattan 
S.  B.  Morison  W.  E.  Guthrie 

F.  G.  Blair  C.  H.  Weston 

VOL.  XXVI,  1910 

E.  P.  Radford  E.  M.  Gerould 
W.  W.  Smith*  F.  L.  Gross* 

H.  W.  Wesman  J.  A.  Henderson 

R.  St.B.  Boyd 

VOL.  XXVII,  1911 

R.  B.  Frye  W.  S.  Thomas 

W.  W.  Cortelyou       R.  C.  Smith 
J.  F.  Weintz  J.  O.  Sharpe 


VOL.  XXVIII,  1912 


R.  F.  Scott,  Jr. 
R.  C.  Bacon 
W.  J.  Tuohey* 
D.  West 


H.  F.  Weston* 
K.  W.  Davidson 
C.  R.  Walker,  Jr. 
L.  E.  Fulford 


R.  A.  Burlen 

VOL.  XXIX,  1913 
S.  W.  Atkins  H.  M.  Heywood 

E.  P.  Bogle  S.  W.  Meek 

H.  W.  Porter  A.  S.  Harrison 

H.  H.  Neuberger 

VOL.  XXX,  1914 
A.  Putnam*  D.  J.  Harris 

D.  T.  Sanders,  2d*     C.  B.  Armstrong 

J.    RlPPENBEIN  R.    M.    NEWCOMB 

E.  A.  Grunsfeld,  Jr. 

VOL.  XXXI,  1915 

R.  M.  Newcomb  P.  M.  Zenner* 

C.  W.  Franz*  G.  N.  Walker 

L.    F.    TlMMERMAN  R.    L.    BuELL 

P.  H.  Robinson  W.  Williams 

W.  C.  G.  McDowell  M.  M.  Wright 

VOL.  XXXII,  1916 

A.  J.  Connell  B.  Rockwell 
L.  H.  Hitzrot  F.  J.  Wakem 
J.  E.  Chilton,  2d*      R.  M.  Illsley 

R.  C.  Duffie 

VOL.  XXXIII,  1917 

B.  Rockwell*  A.  F.  MacNichol 
S.  B.  Creasey*             H.  F.  Manchester 
W.  F.  Goodell             P.  H.  Page* 

H.  D.  Lamson  R.  B.  Hamblett 

VOL.  XXXIV,  1918 

J.  J.  Sack  W.  C.  Bennett* 

C.  H.  Huddleston       D.  R.  Martin 
R.  G.  Johnson*  B.  F.  Tolles 
W.  S.  Howland            C.  B.  P.  Cobb 

J.  H.  Terry 
*Resigned 


151 


Bulletin 

THE  closest  approximation  in  Exeter's  publications  to  magazines  like  the  Cos?nopolitan  is 
the  Bulletin  of  the  Phillips  Exeter  Academy,  published  quarterly  by  the  school  and  sent 
free  to  all  of  the  eight  or  nine  thousand  living  alumni.  Because  of  the  extent  of  its  circula- 
tion the  Bulletin  informs  Exeter's  friends  as  nothing  else  can  of  events  and  of  the  needs  of  the 
school.  Advertising  is  limited  to  alumni  notes.  This  year  a  new  80-page  edition  of  Exeter  Life 
containing  several  pages  of  new  photographs  is  being  printed.  Though  not  pretending  to  compete 
with  the  New  York  Life  or  the  Peal,  this  number  should  be  a  great  help  to  alumni  in  making 
friends  for  the  school  and  directing  prospective  students  to  Exeter.  The  editors  are  Professor 
F.  W.  Cushwa  and  C.  E.  Atwood. 

"E-Book" 

The  little  vest-pocket  E-book,  the  handbook  of  Phillips  Exeter  Academy,  which  every 
student  receives  on  his  first  day  at  Exeter,  was  this  fall  made  more  useful  by  the  inclusion  of  a  small 
indexed  map.  It  would  be  well  to  continue  this  in  future  E-books.  The  book  was  bound  this  year 
in  grey  leather  and  contained  other  new  features,  while  some  useless  parts  were  removed.  The 
book  was  indeed  of  great  service  throughout  the  year,  especially  for  the  new  boys,  and  reflects 
credit  on  its  editors,  J.  P.  Gilmore,  '18,  J.  G.  Curtis,  '18,  and  C.  A.  Stonehiil,  '19. 

Exeter  Calendar 

The  yearly  Exeter  calendar  contained  the  same  matter  as  usual.  The  dedication  was  to  Dr. 
Perry.  The  handsome  leather  cover  was  most  attractive.  T.  F.  Fitzgerald,  '20,  who  received 
the  1917  concession,  may  have  lost  heavily,  as  the  calendars  did  not  arrive  until  January  and  con- 
sequently many  copies  remained  unsold.  The  Pean  suggests  that  its  plates  can  be  put  to  a  better 
use  by  a  less  expensive  calendar  printed  in  Exeter  as  a  special  issue  of  the  Monthly,  as  has  been 
done  before.    The  Monthly  can  thus  obviate  its  usually  precarious  financial  standing. 


Programmes 


The  big  football  programme  for  the  Andover  game,  and  the  smaller  programmes  for  Wash- 
ington's Birthday  and  the  Andover  track  meet,  were  all  very  efficiently  and  altruistically  (?)  handled 
by  "Skinny"  Hudson,  '18,  and  his  corps  of  helpers. 

Service  Issues  of  the  Exonian 

As  a  link  between  the  Academy  and  Exeter  men  in  the  service  the  Exonian  this  year  issued 
two  special  service  issues  which  were  mailed  to  approximately  1,200  men  in  the  service.  The 
December  issue  was  in  magazine  form  with  an  attractive  cover,  consisting  of  a  colored  picture  of 
the  Academy  building  and  Christmas  greetings.  This  issue  was  under  the  personal  supervision 
of  Professor  Cushwa,  who  had  with  him  as  special  editors  C.  L.  Day,  '18,  J.  G.  Curtis,  '18,  and 
Lindsay  Crawford,  '18.  The  winter  service  issue  was  the  usual  anniversary  issue  of  the  Exonian 
enlarged.  Both  issues  contained  the  events  of  interest  during  the  term  and  letters  from  the  front. 
The  numbers  were  enjoyable  to  all  as  was  shown  by  the  letters  of  appreciation  received.  The 
cost  of  these  issues  was  covered  by  a  fund  raised  by  the  student-body  at  the  same  time  as  the 
Y.  M.  C.  A.  fund  in  October.  Exeter's  idea  in  publishing  special  issues  to  keep  its  alumni  informed 
of  the  school  has  been  followed  by  at  least  one  well  known  school. 


152 


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AN  unprecedented  extension  of  the  activities  of  the  Christian  Fraternity  has  marked  its 
history  during  the  past  year.  The  great  war  is  unquestionably  responsible  for  such  an 
enlargement  of  its  field,  and  no  one  can  doubt  that  in  the  coming  years  of  war  and  reconstruc- 
tion the  Christian  Fraternity  will  continue  to  be  the  most  powerful  influence  in  school  for  shaping 
the  careers  of  many  students  in  the  direction  of  the  solution  of  the  many  great  problems  which 
will  confront  the  youth  of  the  present  generation.  In  the  Sunday  evening  Christian  Fraternity 
Forum,  started  this  year,  can  be  seen  also  an  element  which  makes  Exeter's  reputation  for  com- 
pleteness greater  than  it  has  ever  been.  Even  colleges  would  vie  with  each  other  to  get  men  like 
Thomas  Mott  Osborne,  Francis  B.  Sayre,  and  Albert  Bushnell  Hart.  The  Forum  was  not  only 
largely  attended  by  students,  but  Exeter  townspeople  also  came  in  great  numbers,  so  that  it  was 
necessary  to  hold  most  of  the  meetings  of  the  Christian  Fraternity  in  the  chapel,  which  previously 
has  rarely  occurred. 

Under  the  direction  of  the  Christian  Fraternity  Cabinet  and  the  Senior  Council,  Exeter  was 
perhaps  the  very  first  school  in  the  country  to  raise  its  share  of  the  $.35,000,000  Y.  M.  C.  A.  fund. 
This  was  done  in  October  and  Exeter  went  over  the  top  with  over  $4,500.  In  the  spring  almost 
$2,000  was  collected  for  the  Red  Cross.  Never  before  in  the  history  of  Exeter  have  the  students 
responded  so  unselfishly  to  appeals  for  help. 

Minor  but  important  activities  of  the  Fraternity  must  be  mentioned.  Early  in  the  summer 
of  1917,  sixteen  fellows,  with  Dr.  Perry,  Mr.  Libby,  and  Mr.  Newton,  attended  the  Blairstown, 
N.  J.,  Preparatory  Schools  Conference.  In  the  fall  term  entertainments  held  on  Saturday  nights 
helped  the  new  students  to  become  acquainted  with  the  old  fellows  and  the  leaders  of  the  school. 
A  successful  vaudeville  show  was  held  in  the  Opera  House  in  the  fall.  Seven  discussion  groups  were 
led  by  members  of  the  faculty.  Ensign  McCormick,  and  E.  H.  Chandler  of  the  Twentieth  Century 
Club,  came  to  Exeter  and  led  two  fine  series  of  talks.  The  E-book,  better  than  ever,  was  given  to 
everyone  in  the  fall.  The  West  End  Mission  work  was  carried  on  as  usual.  Mr.  Libby  and  the 
Cabinet  and  all  others  who  have  done  so  much  to  make  the  Christian  Fraternity  so  live  and 
powerful  an  organization  are  to  be  congratulated  on  their  success. 


155 


Church  Attendance 


Baptist 3 

Chapel 418 

Christian  Scientist 7 

Congregational  (Phillips) 11 

Congregational  (First) 2 


Episcopal 65 

Home 4 

Methodist 6 

Roman  Catholic ,  .  53 

Unitarian 5 


C.  P.  Allison 
H.   Campbell* 
C.  C.  Cole 
J.  G.  Curtis 


[Chapel  Monitors 


H.  F.   C.  Hanson 

F.   N.  Rix 

W.  W.  Robinson* 

J.  N.  Selleck 


Church  Monitors 


Chapel 


Baptist 

Christian  Scientist    .    .    . 
Congregational  {Phillips) 
*Resigned 


H.  O.  Clement 
L.  B.  Marshall 
W.  E.  McCaw 
J.  H.  Terry 
L.  Wheeler,  Jr. 
R.  W.  Calloway 
J.  L.  Blish 
T.  Combs 


Congregational  {First) 
Episcopal 


Methodist  .    .'  .    .    . 
Roman  Catholic     .    . 


Unitarian 


W.  G.  Dow 

S.  P.  Smedley 
J.  G.  Swift,  Jr. 
A.  B.  Stoddard 
J.  B.  Mendonca 
W.  M.  Perry 
W.  M.  Pond 
T.  C.  Pratt 


Christian  Fraternity  Forum 

October  21  Thomas  Mott  Osborne "Prison  Reform 

October  28  Ensign  Austin  McCormick "The  Mutual  Welfare  League 

November  25       J.  T.  Bagocius "  Russia  and  the  War 

December  16        Francis  B.  Sayre "The  Y.  M.  C.  A.  in  France 

January  13  Prof.  J.  A.  Tufts "Old  Exeter* 

January  20  Dr.  W.  W.  Peters "  China  of  To-day  and  To-morrow 

January  27  Mrs.  Butler  Wilson "  The  Negro  in  War  and  Peace 

February  3  George  E.  Roewer,  Jr "The  A-B-C's  of  Socialism 

February  10         Rev.  W.  G.  Puddefoot "The  Great  Northwest 

February  17  Prof.  C.  R.  Skinner .    "The  Essentials  of  Democracy 

March  17  Dean  Yeomans "The  First  Year  in  College 

March  24  Prof.  Albert  Bushnell  Hart "No  Royal  Road  to  Peace 

April  14  Dr.  Harry  F.  Ward      .    .         "The  Human  Element  in  the  Labor  Question 

April  28  Dr.  Harry  F.  Ward      "  After  the  War,  What? 

May  5  Thomas  J.  Farmer      "  Experiences  in  Prison  and  Out 

May  8  Dr.  P.  H.  Goldsmith "The  Beauty  of  South  America* 

illustrated  lectures. 


156 


Chapel  Speakers 


1917 

September  23 Rev.  Ashley  D.  Leavitt,  Portland,  Me. 

September  30 Rev.  F.  J.  Libby,  Exeter 

October  7  President  Benjamin  T.  Marshall,  Connecticut  College  for  Women,  New  London,  Conn. 

October  14      Rev.  F.  J.  Libby,  Exeter 

October  21 President  John  M.  Thomas,  Middlebury  College 

October  28 Rev.  F.  J.  Libby,  Exeter 

November  4      Rev.  Edward  M.  Chapman,  New  London,  Conn. 

November  11 Rev.  A.  H.  Howe,  Loomis  Institute,  Windsor,  Conn. 

November  18    .  ■ Bishop  James  DeWolfe  Perry,  Bishop  of  Rhode  Island 

November  25 Rev.  Charles  G.  Sewall,  Albany,   N.   Y. 

December  2 Dr.  Henry  E.  Cobb,  New  York,  N.  Y. 

December  9 Dr.  Henry  H.  Tweedy,  Yale  University 

December  16 Dr.  H.  P.  Dewey,  Minneapolis,  Minn. 

1918 

January  13 President  Clarence  A.  Barbour,  Rochester  Theological  Seminary 

January  20 '. Rev.  S.  H.  Dana,  Exeter 

January  27 Dr.  Alfred  E.  Stearns,  Phillips  Academy,  Andover 

February  3 Rev.  John  S.  Zelie,  Plainfield,  N.  J. 

February  10      Rev.  F.  J.  Libby,  Exeter 

February  17      Rev.  F.  J.  Libby,  Exeter 

February  24      Rev.  F.  Boyd  Edwards,  Orange,  N.  J. 

March  3 Rev.  J.  D.  Adam,  Hartford,  Conn. 

March  10 President  John  M.  Thomas,  Middlebury  College 

March  17  .....    .         President  Benjamin  T.  Marshall,  Connecticut  College  for  Women 

March  24 Dr.  Albert  Parker  Fitch,  Amherst  College 

March  31 Professor  William  Lyon  Phelps,  Yale  University 

April  14.    . Rev.  H.  A.  Jump,  Manchester,  N.  H. 

April  21 Rev.  Archibald  Black,  Concord,  N.  H. 

April  28 President  C.  A.  Barbour,  Rochester  Theological  Seminary 

May  5 Rev.  Philemon  F.  Sturges,  Providence,  R.  I. 

May  12      Rev.  Ashley  D.  Leavitt,  Portland,  Me. 

May  19      Rev.  Howard  J.  Chidley,  Winchester,  Mass. 

May  26      Dr.  H.  H.  Tweedy,  Yale  University 

June  2 .      Rev.  Paul  Revere  Frothingham,  Boston,  Mass. 

June  9 Dr.  William  G.  Thayer,  St.  Mark's  School,  Southborough,  Mass. 

June  16      Dr.  Charles  R.  Brown,  Yale  Divinity  School 

June  23      'Dr.  Charles  R.  Brown,  Yale  Divinity  School 


157 


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PEiL 


Top  Row—C.  E.  Watson,  Kendrick.  R.  P.  Bullard.  Palmer,  Rothstein. 

Center  Row— Mullen.  P.  G.  Kimball.  E.  C.  Clark,  F.  E.  Wright,  Renner,  L.  B.  Laird. 

Bottom  Row — Sisson,  Tolles,  W.  C   Bennett,  Mayo,  Steiger,  Weldon,  Swift. 

GLEE  CLUB 


The  Musical  Clubs 


THE  second  year  of  the  Musical  Clubs  under  the  tutelage  of  Director  Shrewsbury  proved 
even  more  successful  than  the  first  year,  in  spite  of  the  more  than  usual  drawbacks  occa- 
sioned by  sickness  and  the  cutting  off  of  special  trains.     The  unceasing  efforts  of  Mr. 
Shrewsbury  coupled  with  the  perseverance  and  hard  work  of  the  fellows  were  amply  rewarded  by 
the  excellent  exhibitions  of  the  clubs  at  the  various  concerts.     To  Mr.  Harper,  the  new  coach  of 
the  Mandolin  Club,  is  due  the  credit  for  the  best  Mandolin  Club  in  the  history  of  the.school. 

The  Musical  Clubs  opened  the  season  with  the  annual  concert  in  the  Town  Hall  of  Exeter  on 
Washington's  birthday  eve.  Two  weeks  later,  the  clubs,  with  the  except  im i  of  I  he  chorus,  gave  a 
concert  in  the  "Barn"  at  Wellesley  College.  The  following  Saturday,  all  the  clubs  participated  in 
a  concert  at  Jordan  Hall  in  Boston.  The  orchestra,  mandolin  club,  and  glee  club  closed  a  most 
successful  and  enjoyable  season  with  the  annual  joint  concert  with  Andover  in  the  Andover  Town 
Hall.  The  clubs  were  royally  entertained  by  the  Andover  fellows  both  before  and  after  this  con- 
cert. Three  concerts  were  scheduled  to  be  given  at  the  Portsmouth  Naval  Prison  and  Portsmouth 
on  three  successive  Saturdays,  but  these  were  postponed  at  the  last  moment  because  of  the 
appearance  of  contagious  disease  at  the  prison. 


160 


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M. 


OFFICERS 

Leader Chauncey  M.  Mayo 

Coach Mr.  Roy  R.  Shrewsbury 

MEMBERS 
First  Tenors  Second  Tenors 

C.  M.  Mayo  E.  C.  Clark 

T.  L.  Mullen  P.  G.  Kimball 

C.  A.  Palmer  J.  G.  Swift,  Jr. 

J.  H.  Terry 
C.  E.  Watson 
Baritones  Bassos 

C.  Bennett  R.  P.  Bullard 

Kendrick  G.  W.  Sisson,  3d 

L.  B.  Laird  D.  F.  Strong 

G.  Renner  J.  Weldon,  Jr. 

H.  H.  Rothstein  F.  E.  Wright,  Jr. 

A.  E.  Steiger 

B.  F.  Tolles 

Officers  of  the  Musical  Clubs 

President W.  C.  Bennett,  '19 

Vice-President J.  W.  Laird,  '19 

Librarian A.  E.  Steiger,  '20 

Musical  Director Roy  R.  Shrewsbury 

Mandolin  Coach Charles  Edgar  Harper 

Accompanist      Fletcher  N.  Robinson 


Itinerary 


February  20  . 
February  21  . 

February  22  . 
March  9     .    . 


March  16 
March  23 


May  18,  25,  June 
May  29  ...    . 
May  30  ...    . 


Patriotic  meeting,  Town  Hall,  Exeter  (Orchestra). 

Exeter  concert,  Town  Hall,  Exeter  (Orchestra,  Mandolin  Club,  Glee  Club, 

Chorus). 
Service  flag  and  Golden  Branch  exercises,  Academy  Chapel  (Orchestra). 
Wellesley    concert,    the    ''Barn,"    Wellesley    (Orchestra,    Mandolin   Club, 

Glee  Club). 
Boston  concert,  Jordan  Hall,  Boston  (Orchestra,  Mandolin  Club,  Glee  Club, 

Chorus). 
Exeter-Andover  joint  concert,  Town  Hall,  Andover  (Orchestra,  Mandolin 

Club,  Glee  Club,  Andover  Musical  Clubs). 
Portsmouth  Naval  Prison  and  Y.  M.  C.  A.,  Portsmouth  (postponed). 
Ioka  Theatre,  "The  American  Lord"  (part  of  Orchestra). 
Memorial  Day  Exercises,  Academy  Chapel  (Orchestra,  Chapel  Choir). 


161 


#ll» 


» 


Top  Row — A.  S.  Holmes,  Cobb. 

Second  Row— Field,  Gulick,  G.  T.  Barker,  Pierson,  R.  P.  Bullard. 

Third  Row — Hay,  Sweeney,  F.  M.  Barker,  Wadsworth,  Sedgwick,  Fuller. 

Bottom  Row—T.  C.  Pratt,  DePuy,  J.  W.  Laird,  T.  S.  Carpenter,  Jr.,  Berkeley. 

ORCHESTRA 


Chapel  Choir 


First  Tenor 
C.  M.  Mayo 

Second  Tenors 
P.  G.  Kimball 
E.  C.  Clark 

Violins 
J.  W.  Laikd  T.  S.  Carpenter,  Jr. 

Cellos 
C.  B.  P.  Cobb 


Baritones 
L.   B.   Laikd 
Manville  Kendkick 

Bassos 
R.  P.  Bullard 
Elbridge  Teel 
G.  W.  Sisson,  3d 

C.  T.  E.  DePuy,  Jr. 

M.  A.  Hay 


162 


PEM 


First  Violins 
J.  W.  Laird,  Leader 
T.  S.  Carpenter 
C.  T.  E.  DePuy,  Jr. 
W.  A.  Powell 


C.  B.  P.  Cobb 
V.  Field 

N.  Fuller 


R.  W.  Stevens 
G.  T.  Barker 


ununwinn 


Tto^nrtfyiiJ^v 


Viola 
D.  R.  Martin 

Violoncellos 


Bass  Viol 
A.  M.  Clarke 

Flute 

R.    P.    BULLARD 

Clarinets 

Cornets 
A.  S.  Holmes 

Drums 
D.  O.  Wilson 

Piano 
F.  M.  Barker 


Second  Violins 
R.  W.  Berkeley 
T.  C.  Pratt 
R.  Sedgwick 
F.  F.  Sweeney 
K.  J.  Tilton 


J.  H.  Gulick 
M.  A.  Hay 


J.  B.  Wadsworth 

F.    O.    W.    PlERSON 


163 


Top  Row— Cobb,  Edmonds,  A.  C.  Bickford,  H.  J.  Bickford,  R.  P.  Bullard,  Cogan,  G.  T.  Barker,  J.  E.  DuBois. 

Second  Row — A.  S.  Holmes,  Kendrick,  Falk,  J.  M.  Kimball,  Rice,  Garrick.  R.  S.  Elliot. 
Third  Row — Dillon,  F.  M.  Barker,  Renner,  Jaeger,  Sweet,  Powers,  Fuller. 
Bottom  Row — Gulick,  Sisson,  K.  C.  Darling.  Welden,  Rowley,  Bagley. 


Mandolin  Club 


Leader    .    . 
First  Mandolins 
G.  T.  Barker 

A.  C.  Bickford 

B.  S.  Cogan 

F.  N.  Dillon,  Jr. 
J.  E.  DuBois 

T.  S.  Edmonds 
W.  S.  Powers 

G.  RENNER 

J.  Weldon,  Jr. 

Tenor  Mandola 
W.  C.  H.  Howard 

Flub 
R.  P.  Bullard 


Second  Mandolins 
R.  S.  Elliot,  Jr. 
L.  Falk,  Jr. 
J.  G.  Holland 
G.  J.  Jaeger,  Jr. 

F.  11.  Rowley 

G.  W.  Sisson,  3d 
J.  W.  Watkins 


Violoncellos 

C.  B.  P.  Cobb 
N.  Fuller 

Drums 

D.  0.  Wilson 


J.  Weldon,  Jr. 

TIi  inl  Mandolins 
E.  G.  Bagley 
T.   M.   Gilbert,  Jr. 
J.  H.  Gulick 
M.  Kendrick 
J.  M.  Kimball 
H.  E.  Rice,  Jr. 
G.  A.  Sweet,  2d 


Cornet 
A.  S.  Holmes' 

Piano 
F.  M.  Barker 


164 


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NOW 

-THE- 


NOW  PLAYING 

THE  AMERICAN  LOH) 

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165 


The  American  Lord 


m 


A  Farcical  Comedy  Entertainment  in  Four  Acts.    By  Charles  T.  Dazey  and  George  H.  Broadhurst 


Presented  by  the  Students  of  The  Phillips  Exeter  Academy 

assisted  by 

Mrs.  J.  E.  Keefe  and  the  Misses  Thomas  and  Baker 

Under  the  Direction  of  James  Plaisted  Webber 

I oka  Theatre 

Wednesday  Evening,  May  29,  1918 


Cast  of  The  American  Lord 


John  Breuster      William  McD.  Pond 

Robert  Breuster      ' Albert  W.  Holmes 

Lord  Wycherly Phillips  W.  Goodell 

Hon.  Richard  Westbrooke Herbert  P.  Price 

Peter  Dunn  (Before-the-Draw  Pete) Thomas  E.  Fry 

Henry  Burbanks  (Texas) Spencer  H.  Whedon 

The  Reverend  Mr.  Denman William  S.  Gutwillig 

Arthur  F.  Chudleigh Ralph  P.  Hoagland,  Jr. 

Andrew  McDuffie,  a  Scotch  Steward John  D.  Mitchell 

Scott,  a  Colored  Servant James  H.  Terry 

Stokes,  English  Villager George  E.  Darling 

Wickes,  English  Villager Donald  M.  Oenslager 

Elevator  Boy Robert  MacKenzie 

Mrs.  Westbrooke Mrs.  J.  E.  Keefe 

Alice  Breuster     Miss  Pauline  Thomas 

Lady  Felicia Miss  Florence  Baker 


Dramatics 

THE  war  has  brought  an  increase  rather  than  a  diminution  of  activity  in  dramatics  to 
Exeter.  It  is  probable  that  next  year  will  see  the  fullest  use  possible  in  school  made  of  all 
histrionic  talent,  especially  for  war  aid  entertainments. 
One  or  two  impromptu  vaudeville  shows  in  the  old  gymnasium  led  up  to  the  annual  vaudeville, 
which  this  year  was  held  in  December.  In  spite  of  the  slushiest  weather  Exeter  had  seen  for  many 
a  year,  the  two  shows  were  financially  successful,  and  the  entertainment  was  quite  up  to  the 
standard  set  by  the  vaudeville  of  the  preceding  winter.  The  big  hits  of  the  evening  were  Mr. 
Harper  with  stringed  instruments,  and  a  one-act  farce,  called  "A  Picked-Up  Dinner,"  in  which 
Miss  Haselton  as  wife,  and  Miss  Fiske  as  maid,  played  their  parts  to  the  greatest  delight  of  the 
audience.  Just  before  the  close  of  the  winter  term  two  little  plays  under  the  direction  of  Mr. 
Webber  were  very  well  given  by  residents  of  Dunbar  Hall.  In  February  Mr.  Webber,  in  the  Navy 
League  roof  garden  entertainment,  gave  the  dramatic  sketch,  "Waterloo."  This  splendidly 
acted  sketch  repeated,  and  several  acts  with  a  war-like  trench  setting,  made  the  battalion  benefit 
vaudeville  held  in  May  a  most  novel  and  successful  entertainment. 

On  Decoration  Day  eve,  Mr.  Webber  presented  the  annual  English  play,  "The  American 
Lord,"  a  farcical  comedy.  The  remarkable  success  which  has  always  attended  his  plays  was 
again  duplicated.  The  play  was  of  a  type  unlike  those  usually  given  by  amateurs,  requiring,  as  it 
did,  some  difficult  interpretations,  but  the  parts  were  all  well  taken  and  the  play  went  through 
smoothly.  Pond  handled  the  different  parts  of  John  Breuster,  the  westerner  who  suddenly  finds 
himself  a  lord,  with  admirable  talent.  Gutwillig,  taking  the  humorous  part  of  an  English  rector, 
made  a  great  hit  with  his  "Everything  is  progressing  splendidly."  Mrs.  Keefe,  Miss  Thomas  and 
Miss  Baker  deserve  great  credit  for  their  excellent  acting  and  assistance.  All  are  indeed  to  be 
congratulated  for  adding  another  successful  production  to  Exeter's  histrionic  annals. 


16/ 


Vaudeville  Shoiu 


Exeter  Opera  House,  December  1,  1917,  2.00  and  8.00  p.  m. 

Act  I.  ''The  Merry  Mandoliers,"  A  C.  Bickford,  H.  T.  Bickford,  W.  C.  H.  Howard, 
W.  S.  Powers,  H.  H.  Rothstein,  K.  C.  Sutphen. 

Act  II.  "  The  Tawzeehawzee  Bitters  Vendor;"  The  Plausible  Vendor, Corliss  Lamont ;  Smudge, 
the  Comedy  Troupe,  R.  L.  Wiel;   Hi  Grass,  a  deaf  rustic,  W.  K.  Slack. 

Act  III.    "  The  Star  Spangled  Banner;"    Battalion  Colors  and  Color  Guard. 

Act  IV.     "Acrobatic  Artistry;"  V.  E.  Wright,  Jr.,  R.  L.  Wintringer. 

Act  V.    "Two  Tramps  Loose  in  Exeter,"  G.  W.  Roche,  J.  D.  Mitchell. 

Act  VI.    "Music  as  You  Wish  it  Was,"  Mr.  C.  E.  Harper  and  Mrs.  R.  R.  Shrewsbury. 

Act  VII.  "A  Picked  Up  Dinner,"  a  one  act  farce;  Mr.  John  Thompson,  J.  J.  Sack;  Mrs. 
Nellie  Thompson,  Miss  Reta  Haselton ;   Biddy,  an  Irish  maid,  Miss  Margaret  Fiske. 

Act  VIII.  Strand  comedy,  ''For  Sweet  Charity,"  and  Bluebird  five-reel  feature,  "The 
Rescue,"  with  Dorothy  Phillips. 

Music  by  Baker's  Orchestra. 

General  manager,  Mr.  Libby:  stage,  Mr.  Shrewsbury;  lighting,  Mr.  Clarke;  properties, 
E.  W.  Sweezy;  advertising  and  business,  J  G.  Curtis.  Opera  House  and  films  donated  by  Ioka 
Theatre.  Afternoon  show  for  benefit  of  the  West  End  Mission.  Evening  show  for  various  other 
causes. 


Military  Benefit 

Exeter  Opera  House,  May  25,  1918 


WATERLOO 
By  Sir  Arthur  Conan  Doyle 

CAST   OF   CHARACTERS 

Corporal  Gregory  Brewster,  "The  Straggler" 

Mr.  J.  P.  Webber 

Sergeant  Archie  McDonald,  R.  A 

Ralph  P.  Hoagland 

Colonel     James     Midwinter,     Royal     Scots 

Guards  ....  Phillips  W.  Goodell 
Norah  Brewster,  the  Corporal's  Grandniece 

Miss  Pauline  Thomas 

Scene:     Corporal   Brewster's   Cottage   in 
Woolwich. 
Time:    June,  1881. 


"A  NIGHT  IN  THE  TRENCHES" 

Staged  by  Capt.  S.  A.  Dion 

cast  of  characters 

Captain  Chumley      .    .    .     Capt.  S.  A.  Dion 

Captain  Bowie,  U.  S.  A.,  Mr.  H.  S.  Stuckey 

Officer  in  charge  of  bayonet  detail     .... 

O.  P.  Williams 

Cooks      .    .     G.  W.  Roche,  H.  C.  Randall 
German  Prisoners,  J.  H.  Bice,  T.  L.  Mullen 

Mr.  Jazz H.  H.  Rothstein 

Andrew  MacOlcott CM.  Mayo 

Busy  Izzy T.  L.  Mullen 

Red  Cross  Nurses,      Mrs.   Stuckey,  Miss 

Pauline  Thomas,  Miss  Reta  Haselton 
Bayonet  Squad,  etc. 

Music  by  P.  E.  A.  Jazz  Band 


108 


Phi  Epsilon  Sigma 


Joseph  Andrews,  Jr. 
Thomas  Walley  Bacchus,  Jr. 
Joseph  Hudson  Barwise,  Jr., 
Edward  Clarkson  Bonnell 
John  Howie  Brewer 
Arthur  Joseph  Conlon 
Stephen  John  Connolly,  Jr. 
George  Samuel  Connors 
Stuart  Bodge  Damon 
Winthrop  Griffin  Dow 
Charles  Freedom  Eaton,  Jr. 
Ralph  Charles  Gilroy 
Arthur  Lambert  Hobson,  Jr. 
Allison  Gale  James 
Leonard  Palmer  Janes,  Jr. 
Crawford  Johnson 


Robert  Howard  Jones 
John  McKinstry  Kimball 
Corliss  Lamont 
George  Hutchinson  Love 
Norman  Shaw  McKendrick 
Donald  Laurence  O'Meara 
Oscar  Williams  Pearson 
Albert  Andrews  Phinney 
George  Benjamin  Rogers 
Howard  Andrew  Ross 
Sherwood  Perry  Smedley 
Lee  Oscar  Smith 
Edwin  Victor  Spooner 
Lawrence  Clayton  Warren 
Otis  Parker  Williams 


170 


Jjrr/ra  JVti/rt 


rV 


One  3ailBy2BnkS  kBidoIe  Co  PhUa. 


Kappa  Epsilon  Pi 


Henry  Wadsworth  Clark 
John  Paul  Clotjgh 
Eli  Nichols  Cutler 
Bradford  Chaloner  Durfee 
Gordon  Page  Eager 
Winthrop  Edwards  Fiske 
Clifton  Powell  Fordyce 
Walter  Hamilton  Gillespie 
Donald  Edward  Hew  at 
Ralph  Northrup  Jones 
Donald  Hamilton  Kerr 
Philip  Griffin  Kimball 
Harold  Edson  Kingsbury 
Leonard  Bentley  Laird 


ROYDEN   BONNARD    LlNDSAY 

Louis  Willoughby  Lipscomb 
Donold  Bradford  Lourie 
Richard  John  Luman 
John  McGredy  McClenahan 
Edward  Guennap  Murray 
Thomas  Onnard 
Henry  Martin  Shute 
Albert  Edward  Steiger 
John  Sidney  Stone 
James  Gordon  Wakefield 
Clifton  Edwin  Watson 
Edmond  Beach  Wheeler 


175 


Kappa  Delta  Pi 


Chester  Perry  Allison 

Archibald  Appleyard 

Henry  Hudson  Baker 

Fay  Merrill  Barker 

George  Thornton  Barker 

Stillman  Percy  Roberts  Chadwick 

Daniel  Downs  Chase 

James  Philip  Clifford 

Cyrus  Lawrence  Day 

William  Allen  Francis 

Homer  Hamilton  Freeman 

Harold  Edmund  Gill 

Dorr  Sweet  Hickey 

Charles  Parker  Holmes 


Frank  Hutchins 

Thomas  Eugene  Jones 

David  Hall  McConnell,  Jr. 

Peter  Charles  Crowley  McInerney 

Coleman  Clarkson  Moser 

Henry  Waldo  Murphy 

Cecil  Bartlett  Myers 

William  Herbert  Nute 

Daniel  Neill  Officer 

John  Edward  O'Neil,  Jr. 

Carl  Frederick  Peters 

Paul  Ernest  Vieregge  Peters 

Justin  Cornelius  Sturm 

Frederick  Raymond  Whitman 


176 


Alpha  Nu 


James  Edward  Bathgate,  3d 
William  Claypool  Bennett 
Robert  Paul  Bullard 
Frank  William  Cushwa 
Frank  Abraham  Garside 
Phillips  Wendland  Goodell 
Cornelius  Hawkins  Hawes 
Carrol  Hyde  Huddleston 
Arthur  Lewis  Hurst 
Robert  Groat  Johnson 
William  Beaman  Kenniston 
John  Copeland  Kirtland 
Robert  Erdmann  Lyford 
Wallace  Eugene  McCaw,  Jr 
John  Ryder  Meehan 


William  Ackland  Powell,  Jr. 
Edwin  Ober  Pride 
Henry  Hazen  Reed 
Alfred  Caldwell  Schroll 
Alan  Austen  Shepard 
Ronald  Gervaise  Smith 
Howard  Stanley  Stuckey 
Jess  William  Sweetser 
Howard  Thamer  Torkelson 
James  Arthur  Tufts 
Stephen  Webster 
John  Rogers  Westerfield 
John  Wettstein 
Robert  Ledlie  Wintringer 
Philip  Edmund  Yeaton 


181 


m  •  1 


Phi  Theta  Psi 


Corning  Benton 
Otis  Munro  Bigelow,  Jr. 
Douglas  Griswold  Bonner 
Wilbur  James  Bunnell 
Edward  Bennett  Carruth 
Henry  Otis  Chapman,  Jr. 
Duane  Lester  Clinton 
Thomas  Luic  Conway 
Andrew  Jefferson  Crawford 
Laurence  Murray  Crosbie 
Ernest  Foster  Cutter 
Harry  Ransom  Davis 
Jonathan  Pierpont  Gilmore 
Edward  Francis  Goode 
Henry  William  Hitzrot 
Laurance  Lankler  Hurd 


William  Robert  Kent 
Chauncey  Merean  Mayo 
George  Leo  McDermott 
Paul  David  Moser 
Robert  Ray  Newton 
Winthrop  DeForest  Piper 
Fletcher  Nichols  Robinson 
William  Stuart  Powers 
Hulet  Pieper  Smith 
Richard  Wooster  Stevens 
Edward  Stilson,  Jr. 
Thomas  Madison  Taylor 
William  Frederick  Thayer 
Bryant  Franklin  Tolles 
Frederic  Emerson  Wright,  Jr. 


182 


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185 


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Pi 

K 


OFFICERS 

President C;  E-  Watson 

Vice-President ■ G-  P.  Eager 

Secretary-Treasurer ' Corliss  Lamont 

MEMBERS 
1918 

R.  W.  Berkeley  M.  S.  Jones  J-  G.  Swift,  Jr. 

Roger  Birtwell  Manville  Kendrick  J.  G.  Wakefield 

E.  C.  Clark  R.  A.  Laub  C.  E.  Watson 

Horatio  Colony,  2d  J.  B.  Mendonca  J-  M.  Weil 

J.  G.  Curtis  J-  A.  Nickerson  Leonard  Wheeler,  Jr. 

G.  C.  Darling  Gordon  Renner  R-  S.  Wiel 

G.  P.  Eager  J.  J-  Sack  O.  P.  Williams 

S.  L.  Felheim  E.  W.  Sweezy  C.  M.  Wright 

C.    H.    HUDDLESTON 

1919 

E.  G.  Bagley                                       H.  F.  C.  Hanson  H.  P.  Price 
H.  O.  Chapman,  Jr.                            C.  H.  Hawes  E.  O.  Pride 

J.  H.  Chase  M.  A.  Hay  C.  J.  Shearn,  Jr. 

R.  B.  Chiperfield  H.  P.  Hedges  W.  W.  Smith 

B.  S.  Cogan                                          L.  P.  Janes,  Jr.  W.  E.  Stearns 
H.  R.  Davis                                         W.  S.  Lawther  G.  A.  Sweet,  2d 
R.  S.  Elliot,  Jr.                                 M.  d'I.Lippincott  S.  L.  Tait 

C.  P.  Fordyce                                      D.  R.  Martin  J.  K.  Watson 
t!  E.  Fry                                              D.  M.  Oenslager  C.  B.  Wilcox 

N.  Fuller 

1920 

C.  D.  Adams  Leon  Falk,  Jr.  E.  H.  Mitcham 

F.  M.  Barker  S.  C.  Fisher  G.  W.  Plimpton 

G.  T.  Barker                                      L.  B.  Grouard  W.  W.  Thornton 
S.  D.  Brown                                        M.  A.  R.  Krogness  John  Wilkie 

D    G    Bonner  Corliss  Lamont  J.  C.  Watson,  Jr. 

J.  G.  Butler  R.  T.  Lamb  J.  H.  Wyman 

G.  W.  Chapman 

1921 

A    G.  Avery  Buckley  Hubbard  H.  L.  Spooner 

H.  D.  Baumer  L.  L.  Robb  A.  F.  Stoeger,  Jr. 

George  Glover 


187 


3 


Top  Row— Parsons,  C.  P.  Holmes,  DeWolf,  Sears,  E.  L.  McCarty,  Barnard,  Kilmer,  Wettstein,  Webster,  B.  D.  Bennett, 
Hewat,  Roche.  J.  H.  Pratt.  Rice,  Draper,  Hurd,  Tolles,  J.  R.  Elliott. 

Bottom  Ro-w—R.  H.  Baker,  DePuy,  Gordman,  Garrick,  Torkelson,  W.  C.  Bennett,  R.  G.  Smith,  Palmer,  R.  P.  Bullard, 
Roberts,  W.  C.  Howard,  Head. 

YALE  CLUB 


188 


m 


OFFICERS 

President R.  G.  Smith 

Vice-President T.  E.  Jones 

Secretary-Treasurer H.  T.  Torkelson 

MEMBERS 

1918 

J.  E.  DeWolf,  Jr.  R.  M.  Haskell  T.  E.  Jones  T.  M.  Taylor 

J.  R.  Draper  D.  P.  Head  L.  B.  Marshall  B.  F.  Tolles 

J.  R.  Elliott,  Jr.  C.  P.  Holmes  H.  E.  Rice,  Jr.  John  Wettstein 

1919 

H.  H.  Baker  E.  N.  Cutler  D.  S.  Hickey  E.  L.  McCarty 

R.  N.  Barnard  C.  T.  E.  DePuy,  Jr.  W.  C.  H.  Howard         J.  W.  Sweetser 

W.  C.  Bennett  H.  F.  Garrick  L.  L.  Hurd  H.  T.  Torkelson 

T.  R.  Conklin  C.  G.  Gates  C.  F.  Judson,  Jr. 

1920 
G.  W.  Bowers  G.  B.  Bushee  J.  H.  Pratt,  Jr.  R.  G.  Smith 

R.  P.  Bullard  G.  T.  Roberts  R.  Savage 

1921 
B.  D.  Bennett  C.  A.  Palmer 

Dance  of  the  Yale  Club,  joint,  dance  with  Harvard  and  Princeton  Clubs.    Held  in  the  old 
Gymnasium  on  June  1,  1918.    Music  by  Mr.  Harper's  Jazz  Band. 


189 


Top  Row — Ballard,  Howland,  McCreery,  Botsford,  Downey. 

Center  Row — Burleigh,  Murray,  Stabler,  E.  D.  Andrews,  Hitzrot,  A.  L.  Wilson,  Granger. 

Bottom  Row — Bathgate,  Sheldon,  Lipscomb,  Loune,  D.  H.  McConnell,  Jr.,  Cobb,  Currie. 

PRINCETON  CLUB 


100 


OFFICERS 

President D.  B.  Lourie 

Vice-President L.  W.  Lipscomb 

Secretary-Treasurer    ' D.  H.  McConnell,  Jit 

MEMBERS 
1918 

J.  E.  Bathgate,  3d  D.  B.  Louhie  Edward  Stilson,  Jr. 

C.  B.  P.  Cobb  G.  W.  Sheldon,  2d 

1919 

D.  R.  Granger,  Jr.  M.  R.  Lane  W.  C.  Moore 

J.  H.  Gulick  L.  W.  Lipscomb  J.  G.  Wakefield 

W.  S.  Howland  Maxwell  McCreery 

1920 

E.  D.  Andrews  H.  F.  Garrick  D.  H.  McConnell,  Jr 

B.  P.  Burleigh  J.  N.  Knowles  A.  E.  Steiger 
R.  A.  Downey,  Jr.                             S.  H.  Libby  A.  H.  Super 

1921 

C.  T.  Malburn  H.  G.  MacMorran 

Dance  of  the  Princeton  Club,  joint  dance  with  the  Harvard  and  Yale  Clubs.    Held  in  the  old 
Gymnasium  on  June  1,  1918.    Music  by  Mr.  Harper's  Jazz  Band. 


191 


Top  Row — Sukhum.  Pierson,  Lockwood,  Taylor.  Underwood.  Perry. 

Middle  Row — Gove,  Logic,  Storm,  Ball,  Arthachinta,  I.ane. 

Bollom  Row — B.  B.  Smith,  Mitchell,  Hobson,  C.  Johnson,  Dillon,  Haskell,  Sweeney. 

TECH  CLUB. 


192 


OFFICERS 

President Crawford  Johnson 

Vice-President A.  L.  Hobson 

Secretary-Treasurer F.  N.  Dillon,  Jr. 

MEMBERS 

1918 

R.  M.  Haskell  J.  D.  Mitchell  T.  M.  Taylor 

Crawford  Johnson 

1919 

Phisit  Arthachinta  A.  L.  Hobson,  Jr.  W.  M.  Perry 

R.  H.  Ball  M.  R.  Lane  John  Storm 

F.  N.  Dillon,  Jr.  J.  E.  Lockwood  F.  F.  Sweeney 

K.  L.  Gove  D.  R.  Martin 

1920 

A  F.  Berry  Prasob  Sukhum  R.  L.  Underwood 

M.  B.  Smith 

1921    ■ 

F.  O.  W.  Pierson 


A 


193 


Top  Row—li.  H.  Baker,  A.  Marshall,  Hale,  Dixon. 

Bottom  Row — Jaeger,  Clinton,  R.  N.  Jones,  J.  G.  Bean,  Perkins. 

DARTMOUTH  CLUB 


194 


* 

c  , 


L^ 


OFFICERS 


President  .... 
Vice-President  .  . 
Secretary-Treasurer 


R.  N.  Jones 
D.  L.  Clinton 
J.  G.  Bean 


T.  S.  Carpenter,  Jr. 
A.  G.  Cooper 
H.  W.  Davis 


D.  L.  Clinton 


MEMBERS 

1918 

A.  Marshall,  2d 

1919 

T.  Hilton 

P.  Huntington 

G.  J.  Jaeger,  Jr. 

1920 

W.  T.  Dixon 

1921 

J.  G.  Bean 


R.  N.  Jones 
E.  H.  Perkins 


E.  P.  Hale 


m 


195 


Top  Row— 11.  W.  Davis.  Cobb,  McCreery,  Slack. 
Bullnm  Row — Love,  J.  S.  Stone.  Smedley,  Terry.  Sherrill 

WILLIAMS  CLUB 


196 


u, 


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'  y 

OFFICERS 

President S.  P.  Smedley 

Vice-President D.  E.  Hewat 

Secretary-Treasurer J.  S.  Stone 

MEMBERS 

1918 

C.  B.  P.  Cobb  W.  K.  Slack 
G.  H.  Love                                                          S.  P.  Smedley 

J.  H.  Terry 

1919 
H.  R.  Davis  Maxwell  McCreery 

D.  E.  Hewat  J.  S.  Stone 

1921 
George  Sherrill 


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197 


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OFFICERS 

President 
G.  P.  Eager 

Vice-President 
C.  E.  Watson 

Secretary-Treasurer 
Stephen  Webster 


E. 

C.  Clark 

J.  P.  Gilmore 

S. 

B.  Damon 

C.  P.  Holmes 

G. 

P.  Eager 

M.  S.  Jones 

A. 

F.  Erikson 

D.  H.  Kerr 

E. 

G.  Bagley 

W.  S.  Currie 

W 

C.  Bennett 

E.  F.  Cutter 

T. 

S.  Carpenter, 

Jr.  H.  W.  Davis 

J. 

P.  Clough 

F.  N.  Dillon,  Jr. 

B. 

S.    COGAN 

K.  L.  Gove 

J. 

E.  Allen 

F.  L.  Harrington 

R. 

P.    BuLLARD 

G.  W.  Kennedy 

C. 

F.  Currier 

J.  M.  Kimball 

B. 

D.  Bennett 

George  Glover 

MEMBERS 

1918 

P.  G.  Kimball 
L.  B.  Laird 
L.  E.  Mulloy 
J.  A.  Nickerson,  2d 

1919 

F.  J.  Haley 

C.  H.  Hawes 

D.  E.  Hewat 
J.  W.  Laird 

E.  H.  Perkins 
1920 

P.  C.  C.  McInerney 

Maxwell  McConnell  A.  E.  Steiger 

F.  H.  Owen,  Jr.  P.  E.  Yeaton 

1921 
R.  M.  Deane  B.  V.  McAdams 


H.  F.  Richards 
S.  P.  Smedley 
C.  E.  Watson 
Leonard  Wheeler,  Jr. 

E.  O.  Pride 
R.  T.  Thayer 
Stephen  Webster 
C.  B.  Wilcox 


G.  W.  Plimpton 


Dance  of  the  Bay  State  Club,  jaint  dance  with  the  Empire  State  Club.     Held  in  the  old 
Gymnasium  on  November  17,  1917.    Music  by  the  Pentucket  Orchestra. 


199 


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OFFICERS 

President    .    ■. R.  G.  Johnson 

Vice-President . T.   K.   O'Brien 

Secretary-Treasurer F.  H.  Rowley 

MEMBERS 

1918 
C.  B.  P.  Cobb  A.  P.  Lang  J.  W.  Watkins 

W.  S.  Gutwillig  R.  G.  Reeder  J.  M.  Weil 

C.  H.  Huddleston  R.  J.  R.  Reeder  John  Wettstein 

R.  G.  Johnson  Edward  Stilson,  Jr. 

1919 

H.  H.  Baker  C.  T.  E.  DePuy  T.  K.  O'Brien 

J.  H.  Bice  R.  S.  Elliot,  Jr.  P.  E.  V.  Peters 

H.  O.  Chapman,  Jr.  D.  S.  Hickey  H.  H.  Reed 

J.  E.  DuBois  W.  S.  Howland  C.    J.    Shearn,   Jr. 

H.  F.  Garrick  L.  L.  Hurd  S.  L.  Tait 

C.  G.  Gates  L.  F.  Kaufman  J.  R.  Weist 

D.  R.  Goldberg,  Jr.  J.  H.  O'Brien  D.  0.  Wilson 

1920 

A.  C.  Bickford  A.  A.  Downey  E.  H.  Mitcham 

D.  G.  Bonner  P.  F.  DuBois  E.  G.  Murray 

S.  D.  Brown  R.  B.  Finley  F.  H.  Rowley 

G.  W.  Chapman  R.  L.  Jonasson  John  Wilkie 

D.  T.  Davis,  Jr.  D.  H.  McConnell,  Jr. 

1921 
A.  F.  Gordman  L.  W.  Lyman 

Dance  of  the  Empire  State  Club,  joint  dance  with  the  Bay  State  Club.     Held  in  the  old 
Gymnasium  on  November  17,  1917.    Music  by  the  Pentucket  Orchestra. 


201 


Top  Row — Burleigh,  McCIenahan,  Townsend,  Sheldon,  Sweezy,  Van  der  Horst,  Lane. 
Bottom  Row — J.  K.  Watson,  Bathgate,  Lamont,  Westerfield,  Powers,  J.  Andrews,  Ball. 

NEW  JERSEY  CLUB 


202 


New  Jersey 
Club 


OFFICERS 

President J.   R.  Westerfield 

Vice-President Corliss  Lamont 

Secretary-Treasurer W.  S.   Powers 

MEMBERS 

1918 
J.  E.  Bathgate,  3d  G.  W.  Sheldon,  2d 

J.  M.  McClenahan  E.  W.  Sweezy 

J.  R.  Westerfield 

1919 
Joseph  Andrews,  Jr.  W.  S.  Powers 

M.  R.  Lane  G.  B.  Townsend,  Jr. 

J.  K.  Watson 

1920 
B.  P.  Burleigh  Corliss  Lamont 

1921 
Allston  Van  der  Horst 


203 


Top  Raw — Sweeney,  H.  H.  Flather,  Hutchins,  Cotton,  Hale,  Colony. 

Bollom  Row—W.  Howard,  Colton,  Stearns,  H.  F.  Baker,  Birtwell,  Scott,  Dixon. 

GRANITE  STATE  CLUB 


204 


OFFICERS 

President H.  F.  Baker 

Vice-President W.  E.  Stearns 

Secretary-Treasurer Parker  Huntington 


Roger  Birtwell 
Horatio  Colony,  2d 
E.  L.  Dearborn 

H.  F.  Baker 
H.  H.  Flather 
H.  F.  C.  Hanson 


D.  R.  Colton 
W.  T.  Dixon 

A.  G.  Avery 


MEMBERS 

1918 


191.9 


F.  F.  Sweeney 


1920 


1921 


J.  R.  Draper 

J.  R.  Elliott,  Jr. 

J.  F.  Scott 


Parker  Huntington 
R.  N.  Jones] 
W.  E.  Stearns 


E.  P.  Hale 
Frank  Hutchins 


Woodbury  Howard 


205 


Top  Row — G.  E.  Darling,  Dunlap,  Monro,  Parsons. 

Botlom  Row — Falk,  K.  C.  Darling,  Love,  H.  R.  Davis,  McCreery. 

PENN  STATE  CLUB 


206 


(gap 


Perm  State  Club 


President    .... 

Vice-President 

Secretary-Treasurer 


G.  E.  Darling 
K.  C.  Darling 

H.  R.  Davis 
G.  W.  Hess 


H.  D.  Baxjmer 


G.  H.  Love 
H.  R.  Davis 
K.  C.  Darling 


MEMBERS 
1918 
G.  H.  Love 

1919 
M.  McCreery 
C.  B.  Monro 

1920 
L.  Falk,  Jr. 

1921 
John  Dunlap 


207 


H.    H.    ROTHSTEIN 


D.  M.  Oenslager 
H.  V.  Shipley 


R.  Parsons 


Top  Row — W.  W.  Smith,  Crcighton,  Benjamin,  Gulick,  Wyman,  C.  C.  Carpenter,  J.  R.  Farnham,  F.  M.  Barker. 
Bottom  Row— Ludwig,  C.  H.  Berry,  J.  M.  Kimball,  Eaton,  G.  T.  Barker,  Berkeley,  Pike. 

PINE  TREE  STATE  CLUB 


208 


OFFICERS 

President C.  F.  Eaton,  Jr. 

Vice-President J.  M.  Kimball 

Secretary-Treasurer G.  T.  Barker 

MEMBERS 

1918 

R.  W.  Berkeley  G.  A.  Curran  L.  0.  Ludwig,  Jr. 

1919 

C.  F.  Eaton  M.  A.  Hay  R.  M.  Pike 

J.  H.  Gtjlick  J.  E.  Lockwood 

1920 

F.  M.  Barker  J.  T.  Creighton  J.  M.  Kimball 

G.  T.  Barker  A.  P.  Ctjrran  J.  H.  Wyman 
C.  C.  Carpenter                                 J.  R.  Farnham 

1921 
P.  E.  Benjamin  C.  H.  Berry 


209 


Top  Row — Vorys,  Hubbard,  Gobey,  E.  D.  Andrews,  Barnard,  Thornton. 
Bottom  Row — Haven,  Renner,  Grant,  Williams,  J.  H.  Wilson,  Lippincott,  Butler. 

OHIO  CLUB 


210 


^ 


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i   n 

1  / 

n 

It® 

kJ 

OFFICERS 

President O.  P.  Williams 

Vice-President R.  H.  Jones 

Secretary-Treasurer W.   E.   McCaw,  Jr. 

MEMBERS 

1918 
G.  C.  Grant  Gordon  Renner 

W.  E.  McCaw,  Jr.  O.  P.  Williams 

J.  H.  Wilson 

1919 
R.  N.  Barnard  M.  d'I.  Lippincott 

1920 
E.  D.  Andrews  W.  A.  Haven 

J.  G.  Butler  R.  H.  Jones 

J.  L.  Gobey  W.  W.  Thornton 

H.  P.  Graves  Hermann  Vorts 

1921 
Buckley  Hubbard 


211 


Top  Row— R.  L.  Berry,  Conklin,  H.  W.  Clark.  Babb,  Purcell,  Lewis.  Porter. 

Second  Row—U.  P.  Smith,  Clinton,  Kendrick,  C.  B.  Meyers,  C.  M.  Wright,  Kelley,  Adler. 

Third  Row — MacKenzie.  Perry,  Walker,  Libby,  Jaeger,  Hilton. 

Bottom  Row — Lindsay,  E.  L.  MeCarty,  Luman,  Torkelson,  H.  H.  Baker,  Wakefield,  Slack. 


WESTERN  CLUB 


212 


£ 

L- 

OFFICERS 

President H.  T.  Torkelson 

Vice-President  ...,., R.  J.  Ltjman 

Secretary-Treasurer H.  H.  Baker 

MEMBERS 

1918 
M.  Kendrick  J.  B.  Wadsworth  C.  M.  Wright 

W.  K.  Slack 

1919 
H.  H.  Baker  T.  Hilton  H.  P.  Smith 

R.  N.  Barnard  G.  J.  Jaeger,  Jr.  J.  W.  Sweetser 

H.  W.  Clark  W.  S.  Lawther  H.  T.  Torkelson 

T.  R.  Conklin  R.  B.  Lindsay  J.  G.  Wakefield 

A.  J.  Crawford  W.  M.  Perry  S.  A.  Walker 

1920 
P.  F.  Adler  M.  A.  R.  Krogness  C.  B.  Myers 

J.  T.  Babb  G.  W.  Lewis,  Jr.  S.  F.  Porter 

R.  L.  Berry,  Jr.  S.  H.  Libby  J.  W.  Purcell 

G.  W.  Bowers  R.  J.  Luman  R.  G.  Smith 

D.  L    Clinton  E.  L.  McCarty 

1921 
J.  L.  Kelly  J.  MacKenzie 


213 


Top  Row — Downey,  J.  H.  Pratt,  Porter,  Ballard,  Underwood,  Carruth,  Martindale,  Hewat. 
Bottom  Row — Haskell,  Taylor,  Lipscomb,  Barwlse,  Fordyce. 


SOUTHERN  CLUB 


214 


OFFICERS 

President L.  W.  Lipscomb 

Vice-President J.  H.  Barwise,  Jr. 

Secretary-Treasurer T.  M.  Taylor 

MEMBERS 


T.  W.  Bacchus,  Jr. 

J.  Y.  Ballard 

J.  H.  Barwise,  Jr.,  2d 


E.  B.  Carruth 

L.  D.  Hand 

W.  C.  H.  Howard 


1918 
R.  W.  Calloway 
R.  M.  Haskell 
Thomas  Oxnard 

1919 
L.  W.  Lipscomb 
J.  P.  Marshall 
G.  H.  Martindale 


H.  E.  Rice 
T.  M.  Taylor 


T.  C.  Pratt 
Garland  Stamper 


R.  H.  Burke 
E.  W.  Guion 
J.  G.  Halsell 

J.  R.  G.  Hardy 

Dance  of  the  Southern  Club, 
the  Pentucket  Orchestra. 


1920 
H.  L.  Hilgartner 
J.  H.  Pratt,  Jr. 


R.  G.  Smith 

R.  L.  Underwood 


1921 
W.  U.  Roulette  G.  W.  Rust 

Held  in  the  old  Gymnasium  on  November  3,  1917.    Music  by 


aiCte 


f 


215 


Top  Row — Creighton,  Chiperfield,  McCreery,  Pickard,  Perkins,  Wilkie,  J    R.  Watson.  Townsend.  Cole,  Rice,  Deane, 
Mitcham,  J.  R.  Bowen. 

Bottom  Row — Martin,  Dillon,  Thornton,  Aderer,  Rilmer,  Wettstein,  Marlindale,  Howland,  Ballard. 

RIFLE  CLUB 

Exeter  -Andover  Rifle  Match 


ON  March  24  at  the  close  of  the  winter  term  of  1917,  the  first  rifle  match  between  Exeter  and 
Andover  was  held.  Each  team  used  its  own  range  and  the  scores  were  announced  by 
telegraph  as  soon  as  made.  The  result  of  the  match  was  a  clean  victory  for  Andover.  It  is 
true  that  Andover's  team  was  more  experienced  and  possessed  a  better  range,  but  their  ability 
was  admirable  and  there  was  no  doubt  of  their  superiority  over  the  Exeter  team.  This  match 
was  Exeter's  first  shooting  match,  and  it  is  certain  that  under  a  competent  set  of  officers  the 
Rifle  Club  can  make  the  match  with  Andover  an  annual  event.  In  1918,  however,  Exeter's  range 
has  been  in  such  poor  condition  that  practice  has  not  been  frequent  and  it  is  doubtful  whether  a 
match  will  be  feasible. 

Exeter's  team,  March  21,  1917,  Sanford,  Kendrick,  Howland,  Warren,  Darling,  Day,  Barnard. 
Score,  Andover,  1,157,  Exeter,  1,031,  out  of  a  possible  1,200.  Highest  score,  99,  made  by  Graves 
and  Bennett,  of  Andover;  number  shots,  20;  time  allowed,  20  minutes  per  man;  rifles,  any  22- 
calibre,  Exeter  referee,  Mr.  N.  S.  McKendrick. 


216 


Rifle  in 
Club 


OFFICERS 

President    . C.  F.  Warren*,  John  Wettstein 

Vice-President  . C.  F.  Jtjdson,  Jr. 

Secretary-Treasurer J.   R.   H.   Pickering*,  G.   H.   Martindale 

MEMBERS 

1918 

T.  W.  Bacchus,  Jr.  W.  M.  Gorby  L.  O.  Ludwig,  Jr.  R.  H.  Pickering 

J.  Y.  Ballard  R.  M.  Haskell  Gordon  Moses  H.  C.  Randall 

H.  0.  Clement  M.  S.  Jones  Thomas  Oxnard  L.  C.  Warren 

Lindsay  Crawford  C.  B.  Kilmer,  Jr.  C.  F.  Peters  John  Wettstein 

J.  G.  Curtis  L.  W.  Knowles  J.  C.  Pickard  R.  L.  Wiel 
K.  C.  Darling 

1919 

R.  N.  Barnard  H.  F.  Garrick  G.  H.  Martindale  C.  A.  Stonehill,  Jr. 

W.  C.  Bennett  J.  H.  Gulick  C.  B.  Monro  K.  C.  Sutphen 

R.  B.  Chiperfield  W.  S.  Howland  J.  A.  Nickerson,  2d  W.  A.  Thomas 

C.  B.  Cooley  Parker  Huntington  T.  K.  O'Brien  H.  T.  Torkelson 

C.  T.  E.  DePuy,  Jr.  C  F.  Judson,  Jr.  C.  B.  Sanford  G.  B.  Townsend,  Jr. 
B.  C.  Durfee  Irving  Knickerbocker  M.  C.  Shattuck  R.  L.  Wintringer 
R.  S.  Elliot,  Jr.  D.  R.  Martin  C.  J.  Shearn,  Jr. 

1920 

W.  I.  Aderer  R.  B.  Finley  W.  A.  Haven  J.  E.  O'Neil,  Jr. 

F.  H.  Bardol  J.  L.  Gobey  Frank  Hutchins  A.  A.  Phinney 

John  Bellows  P.  W.  Goodell  R.  E.  Lyford  G.  T.  Roberts 

L.  P.  Brown  D.  R.  Goodnow  D.  H.  McConnell,  Jr.  R.  G.  Smith 

H.  B.  Bullard,  Jr.  F.  L.  Harrington  T.  L.  Mullen  A.  E.  Steiger 

D.  R.  Colton  H.  deL.  Hartley  C  B.  Myers  P.  E.  Yeaton 
D.  T.  Davis,  Jr.  W.  F.  Hastings  H.  K.  Olmsted 

1921 

J.  G.  Bean  B.  D.  Bennett  A.  E.  Burgess  George  Glover 

P.  E.  Benjamin  M.  W.  S.  Blish  R.  M.  Deane  Buckley  Hubbard 

*Resigned 


217 


Top  Row— Kilmer,  R.  G.  Smith,  Wettstein,  W.  C.  Bennett,  C.  Johnson,  A.  P.  Lang. 
Bollom  Row — Taylor,  Love,  Westerfield,  R.  G.  Johnson,  Torkelson. 

ASSEMBLY  CLUB 


218 


OFFICERS 

President J.  R.  Westerfield 

Vice-President T.  E.  Jones 

Secretary T.   W.   Bacchus,   Jr. 

Faculty  Treasurer Mr.  F.  N.  Robinson 


MEMBERS 

1918 

T.  W.  Bacchus, 

Jr. 

C.  B.  Kilmer,  Jr. 

R.  G.  Reeder 

R.  M.  Haskell 

A.  P.  Lang 

T.  M.  Taylor 

Crawford  John 

30N 

G.  H.  Love 

C.  E.  Watson 

R.  G.  Johnson 

J.  M.  NcClenahan 

J.   R.   Westerfield 

T.  E.  Jones 

R.  J.  R.  Reeder 
1919 

John  Wettstein 

W.  C.  Bennett 

H.    T.    TORKELSON 

1920 

B.  P.  Burleigh 

R.  G.  Smith 

The  Twenty-Second  Dance,  the  social  event  of  the  winter  term,  was  in  many  ways  the  most 
successful  of  all  Washington  Birthday  dances.  Not  until  almost  the  last  moment  was  it  known  that 
the  Thompson  Gymnasium  would  be  used  for  the  dance  instead  of  the  Town  Hall.  The  great 
floor,  used  for  the  first  time,  the  simple  decorations,  the  music  by  the  Pentucket  Orchestra,  all 
combined  to  make  the  one  hundred  and  fifty  couples  enjoy  the  dance  as  never  before.  The  dance 
happily  ended  a  day,  in  which  the  one  hundredth  anniversary  of  the  Golden  Branch,  the  dedica- 
tion of  the  Thompson  Gymnasium,  and  the  unfurling  of  a  service  flag  of  over  a  thousand  stars 
combined  to  make  the  day  memorable  and  significant  for  Exeter. 


219 


Top  Row — Eager,  Kent,  C.  P.  Holmes,  Hurst,  Lipscomb. 

Bottom  Row — Hewat.  Love,  C.  E.  Watson,  T.  E.  Jones,  Hickey,  Taylor. 

June  Ball  Officers 

- 

President T.  E.  Jones,  '18 

Vice-President C.  E.  Watson,  '18 

Secretary-Treasurer D.  S.  Hickey,  '19 

Executive  Committee 

1918 
G.  P.  Eager  A.  L.  Hurst 

C.  P.  Holmes  G.  H.  Love 

T.  M.  Taylor 

1919 

D.  E.  Hewat  W.  R.  Kent 

L.  W.  Lipscomb 

The  June  Ball,  June  24,  1918. 


220 


Major  Brewer 


Captain  Dion 


The  Battalion 


ONE,  two,  three,  four,  ho!  ho!  Left!  Left!"  The  clarion  voice  of  Major  Brewer  as  two 
hundred  khaki-clad  figures  marched  with  swinging  step  along  the  streets  of  Exeter,  or 
through  the  dusty  roads  outside  the  town,  will  long  be  remembered  by  many  a  fellow  who 
saw  his  first  military  training  in  the  Exeter  Battalion.  Started  before  the  declaration  of  war  last 
year  as  an  expression  of  the  Academy's  desire  to  serve  in  the  Great  Cause,  the  Battalion  has 
steadily  grown  in  efficiency  and  bids  fair  to  become  a  permanent  institution  of  the  school.  Its 
history  last  year  was  fully  up  to  the  best  tradition  of  the  Academy  and  its  progress  has  ever  been 
consistently  forward,  with  the  best  of  promise  for  1919  when  a  combination  of  athletics  and  mili- 
tary training  will  be  required  of  all  students. 

At  the  beginning  of  the  present  year,  the  companies  were  reorganized  under  the  able  leader- 
ship of  Major,  alias  "Jack,"  Brewer,  who  returned  to  school  as  temporary  military  instructor 
while  awaiting  his  expected  commission  in  the  U.  S.  Army.  A  splendid  beginning  was  made 
during  this  period  and  a  well-trained  unit  was  handed  over  to  Mr.  Galligan  of  the  Harvard  R.  0. 
T.  C,  who  was  secured  to  head  the  Battalion  upon  Brewer's  departure.  Close  and  open  order 
work  with  frequent  maneuvers  and  lectures  filled  the  early  winter  days,  until  snow  and  cold 
weather  forced  the  organization  to  drill  in  the  Town  Hall,  kindly  loaned  to  the  Academy  for  this 
purpose. 

At  the  beginning  of  the  winter  term  Mr.  Galligan  received  his  call  from  the  government  and, 
though  sorry  to  lose  him,  the  school  was  glad  to  welcome  back  "  Jack  "  Brewer,  to  fill  the  vacancy. 


223 


In  the  middle  of  the  winter  term  guns  of  an  Austrian  design,  ideal  for  drill  purposes,  were 
secured,  principally  through  the  efforts  of  Dr.  Perry,  whose  interest  and  participation  in  the  work 
of  the  Battalion  has  done  much  to  insure  its  success.  Practice  with  sub-calibre  rifles  was  started 
on  the  outdoor  range.  The  drive  for  recruits  in  the  winter  term,  assisted  by  a  battalion  mass 
meeting,  was  successful.  As  a  result  the  three  old  companies  were  reorganized  into  two  andtwo 
new  companies  of  recruits  were  formed.  During  the  spring  vacation  a  group  of  about  twenty 
men  remained  at  Exeter  to  attend  the  R.  0.  T.  C.  held  under  the  direction  of  Major  Brewer. 
The  men,  sleeping  in  the  old  gym  and  living  under  strict  military  discipline,  received  intensive 
training  in  a  great  variety  of  military  branches  and  were  able  to  accomplish  much  in  the  short 
time  of  four  days  at  their  disposal. 

In  the  spring  term  Jack  Brewer  entered  the  aviation  service  and  his  place  was  well  filled  by 
the  ranking  officer  of  the  Battalion,  Major  Warren,  who  held  the  command  for  a  short  time  until  a 
regular  military  instructor  could  be  obtained.  The  Battalion  was  extremely  fortunate  in  securing 
for  this  position  Captain  Dion,  of  the  Canadian  Expeditionary  Forces,  who  had  seen  many 
months  of  active  service  "Over  There"  and  had  been  invalided  back  to  Canada  because  of  wounds 
received  in  the  vicinity  of  Ypres.  Before  coming  to  Exeter  he  had  been  instructor  at  various  camps 
in  Canada  and  the  United  States.  Captain  Dion  soon  won  a  permanent  place  in  the  hearts  of  all 
those  under  him.  With  a  wonderful  aggressiveness,  tact,  and  ability,  he  took  charge  of  the  Bat- 
talion, reorganized  it  for  modern  warfare  and  placed  the  Battalion  and  all  its  activities  in  the 
forefront  of  interest.  Special  signal,  telephone,  bayonet  and  machine  gun  detachments  were 
organized.  A  system  of  modern  trenches  was  constructed  in  a  remarkably  short  time.  Six  after- 
noons were  given  over  to  the  new  training  instead  of  four.  On  afternoons  the  Battalion  was 
veritably  a  hive  of  industry.  At  one  time  could  be  seen  going  on  bayonet  drill,  trench  digging, 
machine  gun  drill,  signalling,  telephone  work  and  other  activities.  Strict  military  discipline 
served  to  increase  the  efficiency  of  the  men.  The  interesting  and  instructive  lectures  of  Captain 
Dion  were  especially  valuable. 

The  Battalion  paraded  once  in  the  fall,  and  twice  in  the  spring  term  to  celebrate  the  departure 
of  the  town's  drafted  men  for  Berlin  and  also  took  part  in  Decoration  Day  ceremonies.  The  or- 
ganization was  given  a  dance  in  the  old  gym  by  Mrs.  Perry  and  gave  under  the  direction  of  Cap- 
tain Dion  a  most  novel  and  successful  vaudeville  show. 

To  those  who  have  developed  the  Battalion  into  an  efficient  military  unit,  Major  Brewer,  Mr. 
Galligan,  Mr.  Chadwick  of  the  faculty,  and  Captain  Dion,  the  school  owes  its  sincerest  thanks 
and  gratitude. 


Exeter  Battalion 


Under  Major  J.  H.  Brewer 

Major,  Warren,  L.  C. 

2d  Lieutenant  and  Adjutant,  Vorys,  Hermann 

Sergeant  Major,  Kehler,  G.  M. 

Color  Sergeant,  Holland,  J.  G. 

Quartermaster's  Department 

2d  Lieutenant  and  Quartermaster,  Andrews,  E.  D. 
Quartermaster  Sergeant,  Gobey,  J.  L. 
Ordnance  Sergeant,  Reeder,  R.  J.  R. 
Privates,  Barker,  F.  M.,  McCarty,  B.  V. 


224 


Top  Row — Hewat,  Taylor,  Lipscomb,  Cleveland,  K.  C.  Darling,  Hurd,  E.  D.  Andrews,  Vorys. 
Bottom  Row — W.  C.  Howard,  J.  C.  Willson,  Mr.  Chadwick,  Brewer,  Warren,- Williams,  Mitchell. 

COMMISSIONED  OFFICERS 

Exeter  Battalion 

Under  Captain  S.  A.  Dion,  C.  E.  F. 

OFFICERS   AND   NON-COMMISSIONED   OFFICERS 

Battalion:  Major,  Willson,  J.  C;  Captain  and  Adjutant,  Sweezy,  E.  W.;  Scouting  and 
Intelligence  Officer,  Cleveland,  F.  G. ;  Sergeant-Major,  Kehler.  G.  M. ;  Color  Sergeant,  Holland,  J.  G . 

"A"  Company:  Captain,  Williams,  O.  P.;  1st  Lieutenant,  Mitchell,  J.  D.;  2d  Lieutenant, 
Taylor,  F.  M.;  1st  Sergeant,  Arthachinta,  P.;  Line  Sergeants:  Connolly,  Graves,  C.  E.,  Holland, 
Huddleston,  James,  Vernon,  R.  R.;  Corporals:  Bardol,  Failing,  Sack,  Swift,  Westbrook; 
43  privates. 

"B"  Company:  Captain,  Judson,  C.  F.,  Jr.;  2d  Lieutenant,  Smedley,  S.  P.;  1st  Sergeant, 
Head,  D.  P.;  Line  Sergeants:  Andrews,  J.,  Day,  Dow  Laub,  Webster;  Corporals:  Barringer, 
Bathgate,  Colton,  McCreery,  Shearn;  44  privates. 

"C"  Company:  Captain,  Howard,  W.  C.H.;  1st  Lieutenant,  Lipscomb,  L.W.;  2d  Lieutenant, 
Hewat,  D.  E. ;  1st  Sergeant,  Reed,  H.  H. ;  Sergeant  Major,  Kehler,  G.  M. ;  Line  Sergeants:  Burke, 
dwell,  McConnell,  D.  H.,  Watkins;    Corporals:       Bellows,  Colfelt,  Cooley,  Pratt.  T.  C, 
Spooner;  39  privates. 

Signal  Corps:  1st  Lieutenant,  Darling,  K.  C. ;  Sergeants:  Barwise,  Murray,  Sweet,  Thomas, 
W.  A.;   Corporals:   Kerr,  Kimball,  J.  H.,  Terry;  9  privates. 

Machine  Gun  Section:  1st  Lieutenant,  Hurd,  L.  L.;  Sergeant,  Renner;  Corporals:  Roche, 
Smith,  L.  O.,  Stilson;  8  privates. 

Quartermaster  Corps  and  Ordnance  :  2d  Lieutenant,  Andrews,  E.  D. ;  Ordnance  Sergeant, 
Reeder,  R.  G.;  Quartermaster  Sergeant,  Gobey,  J.  L. ;  3  privates. 

Military  Committee 

Mr.  Ross  Mr.  Chadwick  Mr.  McKendrick  Mr.    Sweet 

J,  H.  Brewer*  Eugene  Galligan*  Capt.  S.  A.  Dion         'Resigned 


225 


o 

I— I 

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«1 
PQ 

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«^££     Hf^jf-^,^ 


Company  A 

Captain,  Willson,  J   C. 
1st  Lieutenant,  Mitchell,  J.  D. 
2d  Lieutenant,  Darling,  K.  C. 
1st  Sergeant,  Arthachinta,  Phisit 


Graves,  C.  E. 


Bardol 
Colton 


Adams,  P. 

Balch 

Barnard 

Benjamin 

Berry 

BlCKFORD 
BOWEN 

Butler 
Bushee 


Sergeants 

Holland 

HlTDDLESTON 

Corporals 

James 

Vernon,  R. 

R. 

Failing 

Roche 

Stone.  G.  L.  P. 

Swift 

Knickerbocker 

Sack 
Privates 

Sweet 

Westbrook 

Camp 

Edmonds 

Haven 

Price 

Cater 

Falk 

Hidden,  R.  P. 

Quarles 

Chapman,  G.  W. 

French 

Johnson,  J. 

Stoeger 

Chiperfield 

Gove 

Kalbfleisch 

Sukhum 

Crenshaw 

Graves,  H.  P. 

Lawther 

Wertheim 

Curran,  G.  A. 

Hale 

MacKaye 

WlLKIE 

Dearborn 

Hardy 

McConnell,  M. 

Wilson,  A. 

L. 

DeWolf 

Harrington 

Plimpton 

227 


Company  B 


Captain,  Judson,  C.  F., 

.lit. 

1st  Lieutenant,  Hurd,  L. 

L. 

2d  Lie 

utciiant,  Vorys,  Hermann 

. 

1st  Set 

geant,  Head,  D.  P 
Sergeants 

Day 

Laub 

Smedley 

Corporals 

Watson,  J.  K. 

Webster 

Andrews,  J. 

Bathgate 

Shearn 

Stilson 

Watkins 

Barringer 

1!  i:\m.i; 

Smith,  L.  0. 
Privates 

Allen 

GOBEY 

Marshall,  A. 

Perry,  L. 

Sisson 

Carpenter,  T. 

S.  GOFF 

Martindale 

Pickard 

Swasey 

Chase,  S.  0. 

Hedges 

Mayo 

Pierson 

Sweezy 

Conant 

Holt 

MacPherson 

Randall 

Tilton 

Cotton 

Hurst 

Millet 

Robertson 

Townsend 

DePuy 

Kendrick 

Mitcham 

Roulette 

Trenchard 

Elliot,  R.  S. 

Lippincott 

Monro 

Selleck 

Weil 

Emmons 

LlNNEKIN 

Northrop 

Schloss 

WlLLICH 

Felheim, 

LOGIE 

Owen 

Sedgwick 

Wilson,  B.  0 

Frost 

228 


Company  C 


Captain 

Williams,  0.  P. 

1st  Lieutenant,  Lipscomb,  L 

W. 

2d  Lieutenant,  Hew  at,  D.  E, 

1st  Lieutenant,  Barker,  G. 

T. 

Sergeants 

Crowell 

Kimball,  J.  M. 

McCoNNELL,  D.  H. 

Reed 

Sweet 

Burke 

Corporals 

Bellows 

Cooley 

Pratt,  J.  H. 

Pratt,  T.  C. 

Spooner 

Colfelt 

Hall 

Privates 

Aderer 

Bowers 

Field 

Haskell 

McCreery 

Avery 

Brown,  R.  F. 

Fisher,  S.  C. 

Hitzrot 

O'Meara 

Baumer 

Brownson 

Flather,  H.  H. 

Kennedy' 

Pike 

Bean,  J.  G. 

Currier,  C.  F. 

Fuller 

Kingsbury 

Reilly 

Bean,  R.  L. 

Deane 

Granger 

Lamont 

Robb 

Bernard 

Downey 

Grouard 

Lockwood 

Scott 

Blake 

Farnham 

Gutwillig 

MacLaren 

Upton 

229 


Barwise 


CONKLIN 

Gove 


Ball 

Berkeley 
Bonner 
Chase,  J.  R. 
Davis,  H.  R. 
DuBois,  J.  E. 

GORBY 

Hay 


Company  D 

Captain,  Howard,  W.  C.  H. 
1st  Lieutenant,  Cleveland,  F.  G. 
2d  Lieutenant,  Taylor,  T.  M. 
1st  Sergeant,  Powers,  W.  S. 
Sergeant  Major,  Kehler,  G.  M. 


Connolly 


Kerr 


Hess 
Howard,  H. 

Howland 

Hubbard 

Hunter 

Lane 

Lenahan 

Lester 


Sergeants 
Dow 

Corporals 
McCreery 

Privates 

Ludwig 
Lyford 

McCaw,  R.  P. 
McClenahan 

M ALBURN 

Marvin 
Mendonca 
Moser,  C.  C. 


Murray 


Rockwell 


Moser,  K. 

Olmsted 

Perkins 

Perry,  W.  M 

Phinney 

Poole,  H.  S. 

Prime 


Terry 


Reeder,  R.  G. 

Robinson,  F.  C.  R. 

Sanford,  C.  B. 

Sewall 

Sherrill 

Slack 

Smith,  D. 


230 


Director  Ross 


Assistant  Director  Connors 


Athletics 


EXETER  has  the  reputation  of  turning  out  men.  She  maintains  this  reputation  bj  a  high 
standard  of  scholarship  and  a  rigid  system  of  physical  training.  When  an  Exeter  man  works, 
he  works  hard;  when  he  plays,  he  plays  hard.  Few  schools  or  colleges  in  the  country  offer 
the  opportunity  for  bodily  development  which  Exeter,  with  her  wealth  of  equipment  and  effi- 
cient instruction,  offers. 

Every  season  and  every  weather  condition  is  provided  for.  The  Plimpton  Playing  Fields  of 
25  acres  and  the  Playing  Fields-Beyond  of  380"acres,  of  which  about  90  is  open  land,  provide  for  all 
outdoor  athletics.  In  the  fall  three  or  four  football  gridirons  are  often  in  use.  In  the  spring  as 
many  baseball  diamonds  are  alive  with  contending  nines.  To  the  present  nine  tennis  courts  on 
the  Playing  Fields  have  been  added  this  year  eight  new  courts.  In  the  winter  by  flooding  some 
of  the  tennis  courts,  excellent  hockey  rinks  are  formed.  Hockey  is  also  played  on  the  Exeter  River, 
running  between  the  two  fields.  Skiing,  tobogganing,  and  snowshoeing  were  much  favored  sports 
during  the  past  year.  For  track,  the  Plimpton  Playing  Fields  has  a  quarter-mile  cinder  oval  and 
a  220-yard  straightaway  which  are  among  the  best  in  the  country.  The  woodland  of  the  Fields- 
Beyond  makes  ideal  ground  for  cross-country  running.  In  the  winter  track  men  keep  in  training 
by  the  use  of  the  board  track  behind  the  old  gym.  A  new  wooden  track  is  to  be  built  this  year 
behind  the  new  gym,  which  will  probably  remain  in  use  until  after  the  war,  when  Exeter's  projected 
baseball  cage,  containing  a  full-sized  diamond,  can  be  built.  Exeter  crews  are  provided  with 
excellent  four  and  eight  oared  shells  housed  in  the  new  Marshall  Newell  boat-house  situated  on  the 
Salt  River  just  off  the  main  street  of  the  town.  Golf  enthusiasts  practice  their  sport  on  the  course 
laid  out  on  the  Fields-Beyond  and  nature  lovers  find  beautiful  forest  walks  in  the  Libby  Paths. 
On  this  field  too  are  the  extensive  grounds  used  for  the  drilling  and  maneuvers  of  the  battalion. 
This  year,  under  the  supervision  of  Captain  Dion,  a  modern  system  of  trenches  was  constructed 
just  beyond  the  golf  course  on  well-drained  ground. 

For  indoor  athletics,  there  is  the  new  Thompson  Gymnasium  and  Swimming  Pool,  one  of  the 
largest  and  best  equipped  gymnasiums  in  the  country.  This  building,  dedicated  on  February 
22nd,  is  a  magnificent  limestone  structure  situated  just  to  the  west  of  the  Playing  Fields.  It  is  a 
two  story  building,  consisting  of  a  main  section  and  two  wings.  The  main  floor  has  a  floor  space 
120x80.  The  basement  below  it  is  occupied  by  a  large  locker-room,  a  baseball  cage,  two  bowling- 
alleys,  spacious  shower  and  drying  rooms,  and  rooms  for  the  use  of  the  faculty  and  visiting  teams. 
In  the  east  wing  is  the  swimming  pool,  75x26  with  a  depth  of  from  4  to  9  feet.  In  the  west  wing 
are  the  offices,  three  squash  courts,  and  large  rooms  for  boxing,  fencing  and  special  exercises.  On 
the  main  floor  is  a  wealth  of  apparatus.  The  new  building  makes  possible  the  addition  to  bowling 
and  gymnastics,  of  swimming,  basketball,  squash  tennis,  handball,  and  perhaps  boxing  and 


233 


wrestling  to  Exeter's  indoor  sports,  which  can  all  be  enjoyed  to  their  fullest  extent  when  the  war 
is  over. 

With  such  extensive  grounds  and  elaborate  equipment,  and  with  six  hundred  fellows  to  handle, 
it  is  necessary  to  have  a  considerable  number  of  men  give  all  or  part  of  their  time  to  supervision 
and  coaching.  At  the  head  of  the  system  is  Mr.  Boss,  Director  of  the  Gymnasium  and  Athletics. 
With  him  as  assistant  is  Mr.  Pearson.  Great  credit  is  due  both  these  men  for  their  untiring  efforts  and 
excellent  results.  Coach  Connors,  of  track,  Coach  Vaughan  and  Mr.  Stuckey,  of  football,  Coach 
Carney,  of  baseball,  Mr.  Benton,  of  crew,  and  Mr.  Crosbie,  of  golf,  may  be  judged  by  the  teams 
they  have  produced.  The  new  swimming  pool  is  under  the  supervision  of  Mr.  Holm.  The  bat- 
talion has  been  brought  to  a  high  point  of  efficiency  by  Captain  Dion,  C.  E.  F. 

The  excellence  of  Exeter's  athletic  staff  is  proven  by  the  almost  uniform  success  in  competition 
with  other  schools.  Andover  is,  of  course,  Exeter's  greatest  rival,  and  the  spirit  between  the  two 
schools  is  probably  as  fine  an  example  of  sportsmanship  as  can  be  found  anywhere.  Exeter  has 
had  rather  had  the  edge  on  Andover  of  late  years  in  athletic  victories,  but  she  has  still  to  even 
up  Andover's  successes  of  previous  years.  Whatever  disadvantage  Andover  may  have  had  in 
athletics  in  the  past  year  because  of  a  different  system  of  athletics  and  military  training  will  be 
obviated  next  year.  This  year  for  the  fifth  consecutive  time,  the  Exeter  team  was  borne  trium- 
phantly from  the  gridiron  after  a  close  and  exciting  game.  Once  more  the  Blue  succumbed,  fighting 
gamely,  to  a  championship  Red  and  Gray  track  team,  and  once  again  Exeter,  undefeated  for 
three  years  in  baseball,  slugged  her  way  to  victory  over  her  sister  school.  The  preliminary  seasons 
were  hardly  less  successful.  In  other  sports  too,  tennis,  crew,  golf,  and  hockey,  teams  were  devel- 
oped this  year  which  were  in  the  main  successful.  The  gym  team,  which  has  been  so  successful 
in  previous  years  in  winning  the  Harvard  Interscholastics,  could  not  be  formed  this  year. 

With  the  rest  of  the  country  Exeter  is  stripping  for  action.  Next  year  will  see  an  expansion 
in  the  work  the  Academy  is  doing  to  prepare  her  men  for  service,  for  service  here  and  service  in 
France.  Like  a  munitions  plant,  Exeter  is  trying  to  better  her  product  and  fit  each  individual 
for  the  work  he  must  do.  Therefore,  next  year,  there  will  be  six  instead  of  four  periods  a  week 
required  for  physical  training;  military  drill,  will  take  up  three,  and  athletics,  the  other  three. 
The  result  will  be  a  better  prepared  and  healthier  student  body.  We  welcome  the  new  system  as 
another  of  Exeter's  contributions  to  the  Great  Cause. 


: 


"Mt^0*k 


... 


234 


§- 


Top  Row — Damon,  Eager,  Mr.  Fiske,  Bacchus,  Mr.  Ross,  R.  G.  Smith,  Westerfield. 
Bottom  Row — Lipscomb,  Love,  Mr.  Connors,  T.  E.  Jones,  R.  G.  Johnson,  Torkelson. 


Athletic  Association 

OFFICERS 

President D.  B.  Lourie 

Vice-President T.  W.  Bacchus,  Jr. 

Secretary T.  E.  Jones 

Treasurer Mr.  Fiske 

Faculty  Members     ....   Mr.  Connors  Mr.  Fiske  Mr.  Ross 

Captains D.  B.  Lourie  R.  G.  Smith  T.  E.  Jones 

Managers J.  R.  Westerfield  G.  H.  Love  G.  P.  Eager 

MEMBERS 

1918  .    .    .    .   T.  W.  Bacchus,  Jr.   S.  B.  Damon  R.  G.  Johnson  C.  E.  Watson 

1919  ....   J.  N.  Knowles  L.  W.  Lipscomb  H.  T.  Torkelson 

1920  ....   Harper  Campbel:* 
*Resigned 


&l 


235 


H.  F.  Baker,  '19 
H.  W.  Clark,  '19 
J.  P.  Clough,  '19 
A.  J.  Conlon,  '19 
E.  N.  Cutler,  '19 

R.    C.    GlLROY,    '19 

H.  F.  Baker,  '19 

H.  O.  Chapman,  Jr.,  '19 

H.  D.  Hudson,  '18 


MEN 


Football 
D.  S.  Hickey,  '19 
R.  N.  Jones,  '19 
L.  W.  Lipscomb,  '19 
D.  B.  Lourie,  'IS 
R.  J.  Luman,  '20 
R.  F.  Lunge,  '20 

Track 
D.  B.  Lourie,  '18 
G.  L.  McDermott,  '19 
R.  G.  Smith,  '20 

Baseball 
T.  E.  Jones,  'IS 


C.  F.  Peters,  'IS 
J.  C.  Sturm,  '19 
W.  T.  Talcott,  '21 
H.  T.   Torkelson,   '19 
C.  E.  Watson,  'IS 


H.  T.  Torkelson,  '19 
C.  E.  Watson,  '18 


R.  G.  Smith,  Lourie,  T.  E.  Jones. 

MAJOR  CAPTAINS- 


236 


Captain  Lourie 


Coach  Vaughan 


Manager  Westerfield 


Football 


EXETER  could  say,  "five  straight"  at  the  end  of  the  big  game  this  year.    Harry  Vaughan's 
second  year  of  success  has  conclusively  proven  his  ability  as  a  football  coach,  for  with 
Captain  Lourie,  Lipscomb,  and  Jones  as  the  only  veterans  a  team  was  developed  which 
showed  itself  fully  capable  of  conquering  over  (he  Blue's  fine  team  and  winning  Exeter's  fifth 
straight  victory  in  football. 

In  her  preliminary  season  Exeter  won  four,  lost  two  and  tied  one  of  her  seven  games.  The 
season  opened  with  a  decisive  victory  over  Gushing  by  the  score  of  30-0.  The  second  game  was 
with  the  strong  team  of  the  Bumkin  Island  Naval  Reserves.  This  game  was  also  won  by  Exeter 
with  a  pass  from  Lourie  to  Baker  in  the  third  quarter.  Lourie's  kick  made  the  score,  7-0.  The 
next  opponent  was  the  Colby  Academy  team,  which  went  down  to  a  13-6  defeat.  This  game  lost 
the  New  Hampshire  state  championship  for  Colby,  whose  strong  team  seemed  1o  be  fairly  on  the 
way  toward  winning  it.  The  next  game  proved  to  be  Exeter's  first  defeat.  The  Yale  Freshmen, 
coached  by  "Tad"  Jones,  of  Exeter  fame,  defeated  the  Exeter  team  20-0.  In  this  game  Exeter 
received  a,  hard  blow  in  the  loss  of  Captain  Lourie,  whose  knee  was  so  badly  injured  that  he  was 
kept  out  of  the  game  until  almost  the  final  contest  with  Andover.  The  loss  of  Lourie  was  felt  in 
the  games  with  the  Princeton  and  Harvard  Freshmen.    Exeter  was  defeated  12-0  by  the  Prince- 


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ton  Freshmen,  on  whose  team  Harvey  and  Ball,  both  Exeter  football  men,  played.  One  of  the 
hardest  fought  games  of  the  year  followed  with  the  Harvard  Freshmen.  In  the  first  period  Exeter 
was  almost  swept  off  her  feet  by  the  powerful  Harvard  team,  but  she  came  back,  hammering  her 
way  to  the  Harvard  goal-line,  time  after  time,  only  to  lose  the  ball  on  downs.  In  the  third  period, 
after  a  20-yard  run  by  Quarterback  Conlon,  Sturm  took  the  ball  over  the  line  for  a  touch-down 
and  kicked  the  goal.  The  game  ended  in  a  7-7  tie.  In  the  final  game  of  the  preliminary  season 
Exeter  defeated  the  Portland  Naval  Reserves,  15-0. 

On  November  17th,  the  annual  clash  with  Andover  took  place  on  the  Plimpton  Playing  Fields 
under  ideal  conditions  of  weather  and  grounds.  The  blue  team  proved  stronger  than  it  had  been 
for  some  years  and  the  outcome  was  in  doubt  throughout  the  entire  game.  Few  fumbles  were 
made  and  the  teams  played  excellent  football.  Andover  rarely  threatened  the  Exeter  goal,  but  the 
Red  and  Gray  had  several  chances  to  score  which  were  prevented  by  Andover's  stone  wall  defense 
at  the  critical  moments.  Captain  Lourie,  by  kicking  a  field  goal  from  the  25-yard  line,  for  a  second 
time  made  the  only  score  against  Andover.  No  further  scoring  was  done  and  the  game  ended  with 
a  3-0  victory  for  Exeter. 

Thus  the  team  closed  the  season  with  glorious  success  in  the  game  which  alone  counted.  The 
team  had  had  no  extra  coaches  and  no  special  training  table.  The  old  time  celebration,  also,  was 
absolutely  eliminated,  as  fitted  the  times,  no  expenditures  being  made  for  bonfires  or  bands. 
Exeter  spirit  was  splendidly  shown  by  the  students,  both  during  and  after  the  game.  In  these 
days,  to  a  greater  degree  than  ever  before,  the  intense  athletic  rivalry  which  exists  between  Exeter 
and  Andover,  and  which  reaches  its  highest  point  at  the  annual  football  game,  serves  to  bind 
the  schools  more  closely  together  and  makes  them  more  fit  for  the  common  end  they  are  serving. 

Coach  Vaughan,  Trainer  Connors,  Mr.  Stnckey,  Captain  Lourie,  Manager  Westerfield,  and 
all  the  members  of  the  squad  are  to  be  thanked  for  the  aid  they  gave  and  congratulated  upon  the 
splendid  results  achieved. 


Football  Season,  1917 


September  29 
October  6 
October  13  . 
October  20  . 
October  27  . 
November  3 
November  10 
November  17 


Exeter  30  Gushing  Academy  0 

Exeter  7  Naval  Reserves,  Bumkin  Island  0 

Exeter  13  Colby  Academy  6 

Exeter  0  Yale  Freshmen  20 

Exeter  0  Princeton  Freshmen    12 

Exeter  7  Harvard  Freshmen  7 

Exeter  15  Naval  Reserves,  Portland  Navy  Yard  0 

Exeter  3  Andover  0 


at  Exeter 
at  Exeter 
at  Exeter 
at  New  Haven 
at  Princeton 
at  Exeter 
at  Exeter 
at  Exeter 


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Exeter  vs.  Andovcr 


At  Exeter.  November  17,  1917 

Exeter  Andover 

Luman,  Right  End Left  End,  Robinson,  P.  Brown,  Randolph 

H.  F.  Baker,  Hickey,  Right  Tackle Left  Tackle,  Morgan 

Talcott,  Clough,  Right  Guard Left  Guard,  C.  Baker,  McDonald 

Lipscomb,  Center Center,  Avery 

Lunge,  Clark,  Left  Guard Right  Guard,  Scammon 

C.  Peters,  Left  Tackle Right  Tackle,  Moorehead 

Cutler,  Left  End Right  End,  Braden  (captain) 

Lourie  (captain),  Conlon,  Quarter  Back Quarter  Back,  Scott,  Magee,  Adams 

Sturm,  Right  Half  Back Left  Half  Back,  Fairbairn,  Wilson 

Watson,  Torkelson,  Left  Half  Back      Right  Half  Back,  Temple,  Abbott,  Gibson 

Gilroy,  Full  Back Full  Back,  Bailey 

Score,  Exeter,  3;  Andover,  0.  Goal  from  field,  Lourie.  Umpire,  C.  J.  Marshall,  Harvard. 
Referee,  G.  N.  Bankart,  Dartmouth.  Head  Linesman,  L.  H.  Andrews,  Yale.  Field  Judge,  R.  Beebe, 
Yale.    Time,  four  15-minute  periods. 


Exeter  -  Andover  Football  Records 


year 

P.E.A. 

P. A. A. 

1878 

0 

22 

1879 

18 

0 

1880 

8 

8 

1881 

0 

6 

1882 

0 

12 

1883 

6 

17 

1884 

8 

11 

1885 

33 

11 

1886 

26 

0 

1887 

44 

4 

1888 

.......   0 

10 

1889  ...... 

no  game 

1890 

0 

16 

1891 

10 

26 

1892 

28 

18 

1893 

26 

10 

1894 

1895 

no  game 

1896 

0 

28 

1897 

18 

14 

YEAR 
1898 

1899 
1900 
1901 
1902 
1903 
1904 
1905 
1906 
1907 
1908 
1909 
1910 
1911 
1912 
1913 
1914 
1915 
1916 
1917 


P.E.A. 

P. A. A. 

0 

0 

0 

17 

10 

0 

5 

0 

17 

29 

14 

11 

35 

10 

0 

28 

0 

6 

6 

9 

0 

12 

0 

3 

0 

21 

5 

23 

0 

7 

59 

0 

78 

7 

7 

6 

0 

•3 

0 

Games  won:  By  Andover,  19;  by  Exeter,  16;  ties,  2 
Points:  Exeter,  500;  Andover,  403 


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To^i  -Ro?o — Yeaton,  Meehan,  Selleck,  C.  C.  Carpenter,  Finley,  G.  J.  McAdams,  Moran. 
Bottom  Row — Mullen,  Burgess,  R.  H.  Jones,  Rix,  Roberts,  Knowles,  R.  L.  Bean. 


1920  Class  Championship  Team 


Captain 
F.  N.  Rix 


Coach 
J.  M.  Beaman 


Manager 
R.  H.  Jones 


THE  TEAM 


P.  E.  Yeaton Right  End 

F.  N.  Rix Right  Tackle 

R.  Z.  Chew Right  Guard 

G.  J.  McAdams Center 

J.  N.  Selleck Left  Guard 

A.  E.  Burgess    ......      Left  Tackle 


T.  L.  Mullen Lt//  End 

R.  L.  Bean Quarter  Back, 

R.  H.  Jones      Right  Half  Back 

G.  T.  Roberts     ....     Left  Half  Back 
J.  R.  Meehan Full  Back 


Substitutes:  A.  W.  Brickley,  C.  C.  Carpenter,  H.  C.  Emery,  R.  B.  Finley,  H.  P.  Graves,  J.  I- 
Howe,  3d,  J.  N.  Knowles,  J.  H.  Lano,  Jr.,  D.  II.  McConnell,  Jr.,  T.  A.  Moran,  W.  M- 
Sears. 


242 


Class  Teams 


1918  1919  1921 

Captain      E.  Stilson,  Jr.  L.  P.  Brown  J.  G.  Bean 

Manager t    .    .    .    .   E.  C.  Bonnell  E.  0.  Pride  A.  G.  Sada 

Right  End      C.  Johnson  T.  E.  Fry  A.  G.  Sada 

Right  Tackle      J.  Wettstein  J.  E.  DuBois  L.  C.  Linnekin 

Right  Guard G.  P.  Eager  P.  D.  Moser  H.  L.  Spooner 

Center CM.  Wright  C.  B.  Cooley  B.  V.  McAdams 

Left  Guard F.  E.  Wright,  Jr.  A.  L.  Hobson,  Jr.  L.  L.  Robb 

Left  Tackle E.  Stilson,  Jr.  W.  C.  Bennett  G.  Glover 

Left  End R.  J.  R.  Reeder  H.  E.  Kingsbury  D.  G.  Sada 

Quarter  Back R.  G.  Johnson  W.  A.  Powell,  Jr.  J.  G.  Bean 

Right  Half  Back L.  E.  Mulloy  L.  P.  Brown     .  B.  Hubbard 

Left  Half  Back      L.  B.  Laird  R.  L.  Wintringer  C.  A.  Palmer 

Full  Back      '.    .    .    .  W.  F.  Gallagher  W.  S.  Bowers  G.  O.  Pond 

Substitutes 
1918:    E.  C.  Bonnell,  T.  S.  Edmonds,  F.  Garside,  W.  S.  Gutwillig,  A.  P.  Lang,  J.  M.  Mc- 

Clenahan,  R.  G.  Reeder,  S.  E.  Rockwell,  S.  Webster. 
1919:    A.  G.  Cooper,  T.  M.  Gilbert,  Jr.,  C.  B.  Myers,  J.  W.  Purcell,  W.  F.  Thayer. 
1921:    H.  D.  Baumer,  R.  M.  Deane,  A.  F.  Gordman,  F.  C.  A.  Robinson,  G.  Sherrill,  Jr. 


All -Class  Football  Teams 


First  Team 

P.  E.  Yeaton,  '20 Right  End 

A.  E.  Burgess,  '20 Right  Tackle 

R.  Z.  Chew,  '20 Right  Guard 

G.  J.  McAdams,  '20      Center 

A.  L.  Hobson,  Jr.,  '19 Left  Guard 

E.  Stilson,  Jr.,  '18 Left  Tackle 

R.  J.  Reeder,  '18      Left  End 

R.  L.  Bean,  '20 Quarter  Back 

L.  E.  Mulloy,  '18 Right  Half  Back 

R.  L.  Wintringer, '19 Left  Half  Back 

J.  R.  Meehan,  '20 Full  Back 


Second  Team 

.    .     A.  G  Sada,  '20 

F.  N.  Rix,  '20 

'.  E.  Wright,  Jr.,  '18 

.  C.  B.  Cooley,  '19 

J.  N.  Selleck,  '20 

W.  C.  Bennett,  '19 

T.  L.  Mullen,  '20 

R.  G.  Johnson,  '18 

.   C.  A.  Palmer,  '21 

.      R.  H.  Jones,  '20 

.  W.  S.  Powers,  '19 


Inter -Class  Football  Series 


October  20,  1918,  14;  1921,  7 
October  27,  1919,  0;  1920,  0 
November  3,  1919,  24;  1921,  6 


November  7,  1920,  28;  1918,  0 
November  10,  1920,  28;  1921,  0 
November  14,  1918,  12;  1919,  7 


Class  Football  Standing 


Won 

Lost 

Average 

Won 

Lost 

Average 

1920    . 
1918    . 

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.    .   2 

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1 

.833 
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1921      . 

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3 

.  500 
.000 

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245 


Captain  Atha 


Coach  Connors 


Manager  Plimpton 


Track 


THE  season  of  1917  was  one  of  the  most  successful  in  the  history  of  track  at  Exeter.  All 
of  the  meets  were  won  by  the  Academy  team  and  the  majority  by  overwhelming  scores. 
This  fact  is  all  the  more  praiseworthy  as  many  members  of  the  team  and  two  captains, 
A.  R.  Williams  and  Kimball  Atha,  left  school  to  enter  the  service.  As  no  meet  was  held  with 
Andover,  the  meet  with  the  All-Boston  High  School  Athletes  was  made  the  letter  contest. 

The  opening  of  the  winter  season  came  on  February  3,  when  the  annual  relay  race  with 
Andover  at  the  B.  A.  A.  Intercollegiate  Meet  was  won  by  Exeter. 

On  Washington's  Birthday,  the  twenty-first  annual  Faculty  Shield  Meet  resulted  in  a  vic- 
tory for  the  Upper  Middle  team.  The  features  of  the  meet  were  the  equalling  of  two  records: 
the  40-yard  dash  in  4  3-5  seconds  by  Lourie,  '18,  and  the  45-yard  hurdles  in  6  1-5  seconds  by 
Harvey,  '18. 

The  B.  A.  A.  Interscholastic  meet,  held  on  February  24,  resulted  in  a  victory  for  the  Exeter 
track  team  with  a  score  of  33  5-12  points.  Wakefield  High,  the  runner  up,  only  scored  9  points. 
Exeter's  points  were  made  by  a  first  and  second  place  in  the  600-yard  run,  a  first  place  in  the 
1, 000-yard  run  and  in  the  mile,  a  second  place  in  the  300,  a  first  in  the  hurdles,  two-thirds  of  a 
triple  tie  for  second  place  in  the  high  jump  and  a  tiefor  first  place  in  the  relay  race.  This  victory 
gave  the  Academy  team  one  leg  on  the  new  cup. 

The  spring  season  opened  at  the  Pennsylvania  Belay  Carnival  in  April,  when  the  Academy 
relay  four  defeated  Mercersburg  for  the  one  mile  preparatory  school  championship  relay  race. 

Both  the  Harvard  and  the  Yale  Interscholastic  meets  were  cancelled  this  year  and  a  dual 
meet  with  the  Technology  Freshmen  track  team  was  substituted  for  the  Yale  meet  on  May  19th. 
The  contest  resulted  in  an  overwhelming  victory  for  the  Academy  team,  Exeter  men  piling  up 


246 


95  points  to  their  opponents'  13,  and  capturing  every  first  place  and  nine  out  of  12  second  places. 

The  14th  annual  Brown  interscholastic  track  meet,  held  at  Providence  on  May  30,  resulted 
in  a  walk  away  for  the  red  and  grey.  The  Exeter  team  scored  77  points,  a  total  equal  to  that  of 
the  twenty  other  schools  in  the  meet. 

The  last  meet  of  the  season  was  held  on  the  Plimpton  Fields  with  a  team  composed  of  picked 
men  from  the  high  schools  of  Boston.  Torkelson  equaled  the  record  of  ten  seconds  in  the  hundred- 
yard  dash  and  Exeter  again  scored  a  decisive  victory  with  73  points  to  opponents'  42. 

Track  at  Exeter  has  been  so  successful  under  the  excellent  tutelage  of  Coach  Connors  that  it 
seems  almost  trite  to  again  express  for  the  school  its  appreciation  of  his  work,  so  we  merely  point 
to  the  season's  results  and  trust  that  credit  will  go  where  credit  is  due.  The  work  of  Captain 
Atha,  Captain  O'Connell,  and  Manager  Plimpton  was  also  worthy  of  high  credit. 

Academy  Track  Team 

Captain  Coach  Manager 

D.  F.  O'Connell,  Jr.  G.  S.  Connors  F.  T.  P.  Plimpton 

1917 

G.  H.  Batchelder  C.  G.  Krogness,  Jr.  D.  F.  O'Connell,  Jr 

Robert  Fellowes  W.  D.  Litt  H.  F.  Rogers 

W.  F.  Goodell  J.  P.  McAdams,  Jr.  E.  G.  Van  Hoesen 

L.  D.  Goulding  J.  E.  Nally  G.  C.  Vilas 

C.  S.  Hill  H.  G.  Noyes  F.  J.  Woodbridge 

1918 
R.  D.  Johnson  D.  B.  Lourie  C.  E.  Watson 

R.  G.  Johnson 

1919 
H.  O.  Chapman,  Jr.  J.  H.  Riley  J.  C.  Sturm 

H.  L.  Hartley  J.  B.  Saxby  H.  T.  Torkelson 

L.  P.  Janes,  Jr. 

1920 

P.  W.  Goodell  R.  G.  Smith  A.  E.  Steiger 

Track  Season,  1917 

February  3 At  Boston,  B.  A.  A.  Relay  against  Andover 

Won  by  Exeter.    Time,  3m.,  15  3-5s. 
February  22  At  Exeter,  Faculty  Shield  Meet 

1918,  41  points;  1919,  26  points;  1917,  23  points 
February  24      At  Boston,  B.  A.  A.  Interscholastic  Meet 

Won  by  Exeter 
April  28 At  Philadelphia,  University  of  Pennsylvania  Relay 

Won  by  Exeter.     Time,  3m.,  29  3-5s. 
May  19      At  Exeter,  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology  Freshmen 

Exeter,  95;  Massachusetts  Institute  of  Technology,  13 
May  30      At  Providence,  Brown  University  Interscholastic  Meet 

Won  by  Exeter 
June  2 At  Exeter,  All-Boston  High  School  Track  Team 

Exeter,  73;  Boston  High  Schools,  42 


247 


Top  Row — R  D.  Johnson,  Riley,  H.  O.  Chapman,  Litt,  Woodbridge,  Colliding,  R.  G.  Johnson,  Janes,  Hartley,  McAdams, 
Noyes,  P.  W.  Goodell,  Steiger. 

Center  Row — Fitzgerald,  Sturm,  R.  G.  Smith,  Fellowes,  Lourie,  W.  F.  Goodell,  C.  E.  Watson,  C.  G.  Krogness,  Nally, 
Vilas,  Hill.  Saxby.  Wood. 

Bottom  Row — Torkelson,  Hudson,  Mr.  Connors,  O'Connell,  Plimpton,  Van  Hoesen,  Rogers. 

TRACK  TEAM 


248 


Boston  High  Schools  Letter  Meet 

At  Exeter,  June  2,  1917 

75-Yard  Low  Hurdles. — First,  Krogness  (Exeter);  second,  Lourie  (Exeter);  third,  Cronin 
(Boston  Latin) ;  fourth,  Mullin  (Commerce).    Time:   9  1-5  seconds. 

100-Yard  Dash. — First,  Torkelson  (Exeter) ;.  second,  Macchia  (English);  third,  R.  G.  Smith 
(Exeter);  fourth,  Lyons  (West  Roxbury).   Time:  10  seconds  (equals  school  record). 

Half-Mile  Run. — First,  O'Connell  (Exeter);  second,  Van  Hoesen  (Exeter);  third,  Nally 
(Exeter);   fourth,  Wing  (Boston  Latin).   Time:   2  minutes,  5  4-5  seconds. 

4W-Yard  Dash. — First,  Saxby  (Exeter);  second,  Driscoll  (Commerce);  third,  Chapman, 
(Exeter);   fourth,  Halloran  (East  Boston).   Time:    51  4-5  seconds. 

220-Yard  Dash. — First,  Torkelson  (Exeter);  second,  Smith  (Exeter);  third,  Downey  (Com- 
merce);  fourth,  Colvin  (Commerce).    Time:    22  2-5  seconds. 

Running  Broad  Jump. — First,  Lourie  (Exeter);  second,  Fellowes  (Exeter);  third,  Nolan 
(East  Boston);   fourth,  Vincent  (English).    Distance:    21  feet,  2  1-2  inches 

Running  High  Jump. — First,  Krogness  (Exeter);  second,  tie  between  Feeney  (English)  and 
Goodell  (Exeter);  third,  tie  between  Colbum  (Hyde  Park),  McArdle  (Brighton);  Jones  (Exetei) 
and  Goulding  (Exeter).   Height:    5  feet,  7  3-4  inches. 

Hop,  Step  and  Jump. — First,  Riley  (Exeter);  second,  McDougall  (West  Roxbury) ;  third, 
Hartley  (Exeter) ;   fourth,  Winchester  (Commerce).    Distance:    42  feet,  6  inches. 

Standing  Broad  Jump. — First,  Tobin  (Commerce);  second,  Maroni  (English);  third,  Hussey 
(Hyde  Park);   fourth,  Lift  (Exeter).    Distance:    10  feet,  1  1-2  inches. 

Shot  Put,  12  Pound. — First,  Mullin  (Commerce);  second,  Noyes  (Exeter);  third,  Burke 
(Commerce);  fourth,  Batchelder  (Exeter).   Distance:    44  feet,  1  inch. 

One-Half  Mile  Scrub  Relay  Race. — First,  Exeter  team,  Fellowes,  Riley,  Litt,  Lourie;  second, 
Boston  team,  Nolan  (East  Boston),  Winchester  (Commerce),  Wing  (Boston  Latin),  Carle  (Hyde 
Park).   Time:    1  minute,  35  4-5  seconds. 

Relay  Race. — First,  Exeter  team,  Saxby,  O'Connell,  Smith,  Torkelson;  second,  Boston 
team,  Kelley  (Dorchester),  Macchia  (English),  Driscoll  (Commerce),  Downey  (Commerce). 
Time:     1  minute,  33  seconds. 

Summary:    Exeter,  73;   Boston  High  Schools,  42. 

Exeter  -  Andover  Dual  Meet  Records 


i,  m 


P.E.A. 

P. A. A. 

P.E.A. 

P. A. A. 

1889  . 

3 

6 

1906  . 

.  .  47  1-2 

48  1-2 

1891  . 

.   44 

46 

1907  . 

.  .  39  1-6 

56  5-6 

1892  . 

.   36 

54 

1908  . 

.  .  58 

38 

1893-1896   .  .  . 

no  meets 

1909  . 

.  .  47 

49 

1897 

37  1-2 

.   59 

66  1-2 
37 

1910 

54  1  6 

41  5-6 

1898  . 

1911  . 

.  .  58 

37 

1899  . 

.   68  1-6 

35  5-6 

1912  . 

.  .  71 

25 

1900  . 

.   57  1-2 

46  1-2 

1913  . 

.  .  48 

48 

1901  . 

.  .   61 

43 

1914  . 

.  .  59 

37 

1902  . 

.  .   51 

53 

1915  . 

.  .  41 

54 

1903  . 

.  .   37  2-3 

58  1-3 

1916  . 

.  .  70  1-3 

25  2-3 

1904  . 

.  .   63  2-3 

32  1-2 

1917  . 

.  .  no  meet 

1905 

.  .  no  meet 

Exeter 

Points  .  . 

1,111  2-3 

Andover 

Points  . 

939  1-3 

Meets  .  . 

.  .  11 

Meets  . 

10 

One  tie  meet 

249 


«Jyttli 


Academy  Track  Team,  1917 


Captain 

1 

'rainer 

Manager 

R.  G.  Smith 

G.  S. 

Connors 

G.  H.  Love 

1918 

R.  W.  Calloway 

R.  D.  Hudson 

D.  B.  Lourie 

B.  F. 

TOLLES 

E.  C.  Clark 

R.  D.  Johnson 

G.  H.  Love 

J.  B. 

Wadsworth 

C.  W.  DeVito 

R.  G.  Johnson 

C.  F.  Peters 

C.  E. 

Watson 

G.  C.  Grant 

C.  B.  Kilmer,  Jr. 

W.  M.  Pond 

J.  R. 

Westerfield 

R.  P.  Hoagland,  Jr. 

L.  B.  Laird 

H.    H.    ROTHSTEIN 

John 

Wettstein 

1919 

C.  T.  Alpaugh 

H.  0.  Chapman,  Jr. 

A.  W.  Holmes 

W.  S. 

Powers 

H.  F.  Baker 

H.  W.  Clark 

J.    P.    HUGET 

H.  V. 

Shipley 

H.  H.  Baker 

J.  P.  Clifford 

L.  P.  Janes,  Jr. 

H.  P. 

Smith 

W.  C.  Bennett 

C.  G.  Gates 

W.  D.  Piper 

H.  T. 

TORKELSON 

C.  G.  Black,  Jr. 

W.  C.  Herrick 

J.  W.  Poole,  Jr. 

R.  P. 

TURNBULL 

M.  W.  Bronson 

A.  S.  Holmes 

E.  0.  Pride 

S.  A. 

Walker 

1920 

R.  P.  Bullard 

T.  E.  Fry 

S".   H.    LlBBY 

J.  W. 

PURCELL 

A.    P.    CURRAN 

H.  F.  Garrick 

G.  J.  McAdams 

G.  T. 

Roberts 

P.  F.  DuBois 

P.    W.    GOODELL 

G.  L.  McDermott 

M.  B 

Smith 

H.  C.  Emery 

A.  H.  Goodman 

T.  L.  Mullen 

R.  G. 

Smith 

J.  R.  Farnham 

Walker  Havens 

C.  B.  Myers 

A.  E. 

Steiger 

R.    B.    FlNLEY 

J.  N.  Knowles 

J.  E.  O'Neil,  Jr. 

A.  H. 

Super 

T.  E.  Fitzgerald,  Jr. 

M.  A.  R.  Krogness 

>S.  F.  Porter 

P.  E. 

Yeaton 

II.  II.  Freeman 

R.  A.  Leighton 

1921 

B.  D.  Bennett 

J.  L.  Kelly 

C.  A.  Palmer 

250 


Captain  Smith  Manager  Love 

Track  Schedule,  1918 

February  2 At  Boston,  B.  A.  A.  Relay  against  Andover 

February  22      At  Exeter,  Faculty  Shield  Meet 

April  27 At  Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania  Relay 

May  11 At  Cambridge,  Harvard  Freshmen 

May  18      At  New  Haven,  Yale  Interscholastics 

May  30      At  Exeter,  Andover 

Pending At  Exeter,  All-Boston  High  School  Track  Team 


McDermott,  H.  0.  Chapman,  R.  G.  Smith,  C.  E.  Watson. 

B.  A.  A.  RELAY  TEAM 


Poole,  Torkelson,  R.  G.  Smith,  H.  0.  Chapman. 

PENN  RELAY  TEAM 


251 


Top  Row—%.  C.  Clark,  Tolles,  L.  B.  Laird. 

Bottom  Row — Hudson,  Love,  C.  E.  Watson,  Lourie,  R.  G.  Johnson. 

SENIOR  TRACK  TEAM 

Class  Track  Teams 


C.  E.  Watson,  Captain 
E.  C.  Clark 
R.  D.  Hudson 

H.  T.  Torkelson,  Captain 
L.  P.  Janes,  Jr. 
C.  F.  Judson,  Jr. 
J.  R.  Meehan 


T.  F.  Fitzgerald,  Jr. 
A.  H.  Goodman 
R.  A.  Leighton 
G.  L.  McDermott 


Point  Winners 
1918 

R.  G.  Johnson 
L.  B.  Laird 

1919 

W.  D.  Piper 

J.  W.  Poole,  Jr. 

H.  P.  Smith 

1920 
R.  G.  Smith,  Captain 
C.  B.  Myers 
J.  E.  O'Neil,  Jr. 
S.  F.  Porter 


G.  H.  Love,  Manager 
D.  B.  Lourie 
B.  F.  Tolles 

T.  K.  O'Brien,  Manager 
J.  W.  Sweetser 
S.  L.  Tait 


J.    W.    PURCELL 

A.  E.  Steiger 
P.  E.  Yeaton 


252 


Faculty  Shield  Meet 


February  22,  1918 

40-Yard  Dash.^ First,  Lourie,  '18;   second,  Torkelson,  '19;   third,  R.  G.  Smith,  '20.    Time, 
4  4-5  sec. 

45-Yard  Hurdles. — First,  Lourie,  '18;   second,  H.  P.  Smith,  '19;   third,  Judson,  '19.    Time, 
6  1-5  sec. 

300-Yard  Run.— First,  R.  G.  Smith,  '20;    second,  Torkelson,  '19;    third,  L.  B.  Laird,  '18. 
Time,  33  2-5  sec. 

600-Yard  Run.— First,  Poole,  '19;    second,  C.  E.  Watson,  '18;    third,  Myers,  '20.     Time, 
lm„  20  2-5  sec. 

1 ,000- Yard  Run.— First    McDermott,  '20;    second,  Fitzgerald,  '20;    third.  Goodman,  '20. 
Time,  2  m.,  30  3-5  sec. 

Relay  Race.— First,  1920,  McDermott,  Yeaton,  Steiger,  O'Neil;   second,  1918,  E.  C.  Clark, 
L.  B.  Laird,  Lourie,  C.  E.  Watson;   third,  1919,  Meehan,  Poole,  Sweetser,  Tait. 

High  Jump. — First,  tie  between  Porter,  '20,  and  Janes,  '19;    third,  tie  between  Piper,  '19, 
Purcell,  '20,  Tolles,  '18.    Height,  5  ft,,  5  3-4  in. 

Pole  Vault— -First,  tie  between  R.  G.  Johnson,  '18;  H.  P.  Smith,  '19;  Leighton,  '20.   Height, 
10  ft.,  4  in. 

Potato  Race.—  First,  E.  C.  Clark.  '18;  second,  C.  E.  Watson,  '18;  third,  L.  B.  Laird,  '18. 

Shot  Pat. — First,  Lourie,  '18;    second,  Hudson,  '18;    third,  Torkelson,  '19.     Distance,  36 
ft.,  6  in. 

Total:   1918,  37  1-3;   1920,  28  1-3;   1919,  24  1-3. 


253 


Track  Records 


OUTDOOR 

Event  Record  Maker  Date 

100-Yard  Dash 10s.  E.  F.  Annis,  '05  May  28,  1904 

F.  Burns,  '11  May  15,  1909 

H.  T.  Torkelson,  '19  June    2,  1917 

220-Yard  Dash 22s.  L.  Williams,  '14  June    6,1914 

440-Yard  Dash 49  3-5s.  M.  B.  Orr,  '14  May  16,  1914 

Half-Mile  Run lm,  57  2-3s.  W.  J.  Bingham, '12  May  30,  1911 

One-Mile  Bun 4m..  26  4-5s.  I.  D.  MacKenzie,  '11  May  20,  1911 

220-Yard  Hurdles 25  l-5s.  Walker  Smith,  '16  May  13,  1916 

Running  High  Jump 6  ft.,  3-8  in.  J.  E.  McDougall, '13  May    6,1911 

Bole  Vault 12  ft.  N.  G.  Hansen,  '17  June    9,1915 

Putting  16-lb.  Shot      44  ft.,  11  1-4  in.     E.  J.  Hart, '07  May  30,  1907 

Putting  12-lh.  Shot      51  ft.,  8  1-2  in.       W.  H.  Kikkpatrick,  '16  May  30,  1914 

Throwing  12-lb.  Hammer  .    .    .    .    168  ft.,  10  in.         C.  T.  Cooney,  '06  May  30,  1916 

120-Yard  Hurdles 16  l-5s.  L.  P.  Gowdy, '12  May  30,  1912 

Walker  Smith,  '16  May  13,  1916 

Running  Broad  Jump* 23  ft.,  5  3-8  in.       H.  T.  Worthington,  '13  May    3,1913 


INDOOR 

Event  Record  Maker  Date 

40-Yard  Dash  4  3-5s.  F.  Burns,  Tl  Feb.  25,  1911 

C.  M.  Jones,  '14  Feb.  28,  1914 

300-Yard  Dash 32s.  F.  Burns,  Tl  Mar.    5,1917 

600-Yard  Run .    lm.,  14  l-5s.  E.  A.  Teschner, '13  Mar.  29,  1906 

1,000-Yard  Run 2m.,  16  3-5s.  W.  J.  Bingham,  '12  Mar.  27,1910 

45-Yard  Hurdles      6  l-5s.  H.  T.  Worthington,  '13  Feb.  22,  1913 

N.  G.  Hansen,  '17  Feb.  22,  1912 

Pole  Vault 10  ft.,  11  1-2  in.     N.  G.  Hansen,  '17  Feb.  23,  1911 

Running  High  Jump 6  ft.,  1  1-2  in.         W.  L.  J.  Whalen,  '18  Feb.  26,1915 

Putting  16-lb.  Shot 43  ft.,  3  3-4  in.       E.  J.  Hart,  '07  Feb.  22,  1915 

Putting  12-lb.  Shot 50  ft.,  11  in.  E.  J.  Hart,  '07  Feb.  22,  1906 

*In  the  try-out  for  the  Olympic  games  at  Stockholm,  Worthington  jumped  23  ft.,  10  1-2  in. 


254 


Captain  McNamara 


Coach  Carney 


Manager  Huntington 


Baseball 


THE  nineteen-seventeen  baseball  team  kept  up  the  record  made  by  the  two  preceding  nines  of 
finishing  its  season  undefeated.  Five  veterans  and  excellent  new  material,  under  the 
unexcelled  training  of  Coach  Carney, made  the  prospects  bright  from  theoutset.  As  the  sea- 
son advanced  and  the  players  gained  in  steadiness  and  ability,  the  team  developed  into  one.  of  the 
best  nines  in  the  history  of  the  sport  at  Exeter.  A  .339  batting  average  shows  a  hard-hitting  team, 
and  the  record  of  one  hundred  runs  to  our  opponents'  three  leaves  no  doubt  of  all-round  ability. 

For  the  first  time  in  20  years  the  Andover  and  Exeter  teams  did  not  meet.  All  the  college 
freshmen  games  also  were  cancelled  because  of  unsettled  conditions  caused  by  the  war.  Manager 
Huntington,  however,  succeeded  in  filling  the  open  dates  with  several  excellent  games.  Nine 
games  were  played  in  all,  but  victory  for  Exeter  was  never  doubtful  from  the  first  game  of  the 
season,  with  Lowell  Textile,  to  the  final  game  with  the  Yale  All-Stars.  The  latter  contest  called 
out  every  ounce  of  power  which  the  Exeter  team  could  show,  but  the  well-coached  nine  responded 
splendidly  and,  it  is  fair  to  say,  quite  out-classed  the  picked  team  from  Yale,  which  included  five 
Exonians.    This  game  took  the  place  of  the  Andover  contest  and  was  made  the  letter  game. 

The  game  was  a  splendid  exhibition  of  brilliant  clean  baseball  from  beginning  to  end.  Gokey 
was  at  his  best  and  allowed  only  three  hits,  and  Kelly  of  the  All-Stars,  but  five.    In  the  third  inning 


256 


O'Connor  made  a  two-bagger  and  crossed  the  plate  on  Dana's  hit,  for  the  first  run;  McNamara 
walked,  and  O'Doherty  cleared  the  bases  with  a  home-run  over  center-field.  In  the  fifth  inning-, 
after  O'Connor  had  reached  first  on  a  wild  throw,  Harvey  walked,  and  Dana  struck  out ;  McNamara 
drew  a  second  pass,  and  O'Doherty  sent  O'Connor  home  with  a  base  hit.  This  ended  the  scoring 
and  the  game  resulted  in  a  5-0  victory  for  Exeter.  The  features  of  the  game  were  O'Doherty's 
home  run  with  two  men  on  bases,  and  a  running  "shoe-top"  catch  by  Martin  of  the  All-Stars. 

Dana  ended  the  season  with  a  batting  average  of  .527,  while  Carr  and  Putnam  both  made 
over  .400.  Carr  was  also  the  best  base-stealer  and  accounted  for  more  runs  than  any  other  member 
of  the  team.  Corrigan  made  the  remarkable  record  of  89  put  outs,  and  23  assists,  with  no  errors. 
Others  who  made  1,000  in  fielding  were  White,  Gibbs  and  Conant.  The  team's  fielding  average 
was  .938.  All  these  records  were  made  against  some  of  the  best  preparatory  and  high  school  teams 
of  the  East,  by  a  team,  which,  according  to  the  press,  was  worthy  of  the  preparatory  school  cham- 
pionship. This  speaks  well  of  the  splendid  machine  developed  by  Coach  Carney.  Captain 
McNamara,  Manager  Huntington  and  the  whole  squad  are  also  to  be  congratulated  on  maintaining 
Exeter's  supremacy  so  well. 

Results  of  1917  Season 

April  25 Exeter  3  Lowell  Textile  2  at  Exeter 

April  28 Exeter  6  Colby  Academy  0  at  Exeter 

May  4 Exeter  16         Manchester  High  0  at  Exeter 

May  9 Exeter  20         Gushing  Academy  0  at  Exeter 

May  19      Exeter  10-        Lawrence  Academy  1  at  Exeter 

May  26      Exeter  20         Kennebunk  High  0  at  Exeter 

May  30      Exeter  20         Wentworth  Institute  0  at  Exeter 

May  31      Exeter  5  Rindge  Technical  0  at  Exeter 

June  9 Exeter  5  Yale  All-Stars  (Letter  game)  0        at  Exeter 

Games  with  Yale,  '20;  Princeton,  '20;  Holy  Cross,  '20;  Harvard,  '20;  Massachusetts 
Institute  Technology,  '18;  Dartmouth,  '20;  Brown,  2d;  Bowdoin  College  and  Andover  cancelled 
because  of  war. 


Exeter  -  Andover  Baseball  Records 


P.E.A. 

P.A.A. 

P.E.A 

P.A.A. 

P.E.A. 

P.A.A 

1878  .  . 

.  .   12 

1 

1891  .  .  . 

.  .   1 

7 

1906  .  .  .  . 

.  .   2 

3 

1878  .  . 

.  .   8 

10 

1892  .  .  . 

.  .   5 

10 

1907  .  .  .  . 

.  .  2 

3 

1879  .  . 

o 

10 

1893-1896  . 

.  .  no  j 

z;ames 

1908  .  .  .  . 

.  .  3 

5 

1880  .  . 

.  .   0 

9 

1897  .... 

.  .  12 

6 

1909  .  .  .  . 

.  .  5 

3 

1881  .  . 

.  .   5 

13 

1898  .  .  . 

o 

8 

1910  .  .  .  . 

.  .  4 

5 

1882  .  . 

.  .  .   7 

5 

1899  .  .  . 

.  .  6 

8 

1911  .  .  . 

.  .  2 

1 

1883  .  . 

.  .   5 

16 

1900  .  .  . 

.  .  5 

9 

1912  .  .  .  . 

.  .  4 

5 

1884  .  . 

.  .   5 

13 

1901   .  .  . 

.  .  8 

5 

1913  .  .  . 

.  .  5 

4 

1885  .  . 

.-.   9 

1 

1901  .  .  . 

.  .  2 

9 

1914  .  .  .  . 

.  .  7 

0 

1886  .  . 

.  .   7 

6 

1901   .  .  . 

.  .  0 

9 

1915  .  .  .  . 

,  .  10 

2 

1887  .  . 

.  .   6 

22 

1902  .  .  . 

3 

1916  .  .  . 

2 

1 

1888  .  . 

.-.  .   4 

6 

1903  .  .  . 

.  .  0 

1 

1917  .  .  . 

.  .  no  game 

1889  .  . 

.  .   3 

2 

1904  .  .  . 

2 

1 

— 

— 

1890  .  . 

.  .  .  no  game 

1905  .  .  . 

.  .  4 

6 

Totals 

.  .171 

228 

Games  won  by  Exeier,  15.     Games  won  by  Andover,  22 


257 


Top  Row — Gokey,  Corrigan,  T.  E.  Jonep,  Conant,  O'Connor,  Dana. 
Botlom  Row — Harvey,  Mr.  Carney,  McNamara,  Huntington,  O'Doherty. 

BASEBALL  TEAM,  1917 


Academy  Baseball  Team 


Captain 
T.  H.  McNamara 


Coach 
J.  J.  Carney 


Manager 
D.  C.  Huntington 


L.  W.  Conant Right  Field 

T.  H.  McNamara      Center  Field 

G.  I.  Dana      Left  Field 

H.  A.  Harvey First  Base 

C.  H.  Carr Second  Base 

Constantine  O'Doherty     .    .     Third  Base 


F.  M .  Putnam        Short  Slop 

P.  L.  Corrioan      Catcher 

L.  E.  Cokey       Pitcher 

M.  B.  O'Connor       ....     Second  Base 
T.  E.  Jones Short  Slop 


258 


m 


r'T. 


;\t  •)! 


.4.",".  w 


»V  JBf  >--l 


w' 


tfc-Z=t  |W^ 


os--*:  -«•■».  *i'  .feSS^ Ji 


Sweetser,  Talcott,  W.  D.  Cantillon,  Luman,  Crawford,  Gilmore,  Moshier,  Hunt,  Savage,  Gill,  Goode,  Gilroy,  R.  N.  Jones,  Eager. 


Ciptoin,  T.  E.  Jones 


Baseball  Squad 


Coach,  J.  J.  Carney 


Manager,  G.  P.  Eager 


1918 

J.  P.  Gilmore 

T. 

E. 

Jones 

1919 

J. 

G. 

Wakefield 

J.  P.  Clough 

E. 

N. 

Cutler 

R 

C 

Gilroy 

R.  N.  Jones 

A.  J.  Conlon 

E. 

F. 

Cutter 

D 

S. 

Hickey 

J.  R.  Meehan 

A.  J.  Crawford 

H. 

E. 

Gill 

1920 

E.  F.  Goode 

R. 

A. 

Leighton 

P. 

G. 

Moshier 

F.  H.  Rowley 

W.  E.  Hunt 

R. 

J. 

Luman 

1921 

F. 

N. 

Rrx 

Robert  Savage 

A.  E.  Burgess 

W 

T 

Talcott 

Mr.  Carney,  T.  E.  Jones,  Cutter,  Meehan,  Burgess,  Conlon,  Rix,  Hickey,  Wakefield,  Cutler,  Clough,  G.  L.  P.  Stone,  Fordyce. 

BASEBALL  SQUAD 


259 


1918  Baseball  Schedule 


April  29  Lowell  Textile  at 

April  27  Tilton  Seminary  at. 

May  1  Harvard  Radio  School  at 

May  4  Camp  Devens,  301st  Artillery    at 

May  8  Lawrence  Academy  at 

May  11  Cushing  Academy  at 

May  15  Goddard  Seminary  at 

May  18  Boston  University  at 

May  22  Brewster  Academy  at 

May  25  Portland  High  School  at 

May  29  Rindge  Technical  School  at 

June  1  Dean  Academy  at 

June  5  Bumkin  Island  Naval  Reserves  at 

June  8  Andover  at 

< 


Exeter 
Exeter 
Exeter 
Exeter 
Exe1 


3ter 


Exe 
Exe 


ter 
ter 


Exeter 

Exeter 
Exeter 
Exeter 

Exeter 
Exeter 
Andover 


Captain  Jones 


Manager  Eager 


1917  Inter- Class  Series 


May  9 1920,  10 

May  12   1918,  20 

May  16   1918,  12 


1919,  6       May  16 1919,  14;  1917,  5 

1919,  7       May  30 1919,  8;  1920,  0 

1920,  3       May  30 1918,  2,  1917,  0 


1917  Inter -Class  Champions 


1918 
1919 


WON 

.  3 

.  2 


LOST 
0 
1 


PEE  CENT. 
1.000 

.667 


1920 
1917 


WON 

LOST 

PEK  CENT 

.     1 

2 

.  333 

0 

3 

.000 

260 


Captain  Duncan 


Coach  Benton 


Manager  Meyer 


Crew 


THE  outlook  at  the  beginning  of  the  1917  crew  season  was  rather  dark.     Captain  Duncan 
and  several  others  left  to  enter  the  service  and  Coach  Benton  had,  therefore,  little  tried 
material  to  choose  from.     To  add  to  these  discouragements,  the  important  Groton  race, 
the  races  with  Freshmen  crews,  and  all  other  eight-oar  races  were  cancelled.     In  spite  of   these 
difficulties,  Mr.  Benton  developed  a  four-oar  crew  which  won  three  of  its  four  races.    Middlesex 
was  made  the  letter  contest  in  place  of  Groton. 

Exeter  met  and  defeated  the  crews  of  Huntington,  Cambridge  High  and  Latin  and  Boston 
High.  The  poor  weather  conditions  detracted  somewhat  from  the  interest  in  the  Middlesex  race. 
In  this  race  on  an  unfamiliar  course  both  Exeter  crews  were  unlucky  enough  to  strike  a  stake  and 
one  oar  was  broken.  Both  the  first  and  second  crews  returned — defeated  by  the  abler  rowers  of 
Middlesex. 

As  a  whole  the  season  may  be  considered  a  successful  one  and  the  work  of  Coach  Benton, 
Manager  Meyer  and  the  crew  extremely  commendable. 


Creu)  Season,  1917 


May  2 
May  9 
May  12 
May  19 


WON    BY 

Huntington  Exeter 

Cambridge  High  and  Latin  Exeter 

Middlesex  (First  and  Second  Crews)  Middlesex  (both  races) 

Boston  College  High Exeter 


at  Exeter 

at  Exeter 

at  Concord,  Mass. 

at  Exeter 


Four-oar  crews  in  all  above  races. 


262 


Top  Row — T.  C.  Porter,  F.  A.  Garside,  Teel,  F.  H.  Lang,  Eaton,  Norris. 
Center  Row — O.  G.  Thayer,  Meyer,  Emmott,  Mr.  Benton,  Bacchus. 
Bottom  Row — J.  R.  Garside. 

ACADEMY  FOURS,  1917 


1 


Academy  Four,  1917 

R.  H.  Emmott Coxswain 

O.  G.  Thayer Bow 

T.  W.  Bacchus,  Jr No.  2 

T.  C.  Porter      No.  3 

Elbridge  Teel Stroke 

Academy  Second  Four,  1917 

J.  R.  Garside ".   Coxswain 

F.  H.  Norris      Bow 

F.  A.  Garside .     No.  2 

F.  H.  Lang     No.  8 

C.  F.  Eaton,  Jr Stroke 

263 


Top  Row—G.  T.  Barker,  Stamper,  Hutchins,  R.  R.  Elliott,  Van  de  Water,  S.  0.  Chase,  Clinton,  E.  D.  Thomas,  Jaeger,  P.  E.  V. 
Peters,  Mr.  Benton,  H.  J.  Bickford,  Whedon,  Teel,  Cogan,  Cobb,  Hawes,  M.  B.  Smith,  Allison. 

Center  Row—R.  W.  Beaman,  Allen,  W.  A.  Thomas,  Van  Buren,  H.  H.  Baker.  Hobson,  Bacchus,  P.  D.  Moser,  F.  E.  Wright .  Jr., 
Dillon,  Nickerson. 

Bottom  Row — Reel,  MacKenzie,  MacMorran,  K.  Stoddard,  Burleigh,  Thornton,  L,  R.  Stoddard. 


Cretu  Squad 


i  '(ij)taiii 

Managers 


T.  W.  Bacchus,  Jk.         Coach     Corning  Benton 

R.  P.  Hoagland,  Jr.,*  Thomas  Oxnard,*  Stedman  Buttrick,  Jr. 


Members  of  Crew  Squad  not  in  picture: 
r* 

1918 — Stedman  Buttrick,  Jr.,  H.  P.  Latham. 

1919— -T.  S.   Carpenter,  Jr.,  C.  F.  Eaton,  Jr., 
H.  F.  C.  Hanson,  W.  R.  Kent,  M.  d'I.  Lippin- 
cott,  E.  H.  MacPherson,    W.    A.    Powell,   Jr., 
•  R.  W.  Stevens,  J.  S.  Stone. 
1920 — H.  L.  Hilgartner. 
f.  1921 — B.  D.  Bennett 

*Resigned 

1918  Crciu  Season 

May  11      Brookline  High  and  Huntington  School 

(fours)  (Triangular  Meet)  at  Boston 

J  May   25      Middlesex    (first  and   second    fours)   at 

M  Exeter 

f  June    1        Noble    and    Greenough    (eight-oar)     at 

Boston 

Captain  Bacchus 


Manager  Buttrick 


264 


Captain  Powers 


Manager  Taylor 


AGAIN  the  Academy  hockey  team  had  the  sad  story  to  tell  of  lack  of  experienced  players, 
Powers  being  the  only  veteran  back  at  school.    The  game  with  Andover,  after  being  post- 
poned for  a  week  owing  to  weather  conditions,  resulted  in  the  second  defeat  for  Exeter  in  the 
history  of  the  sport  between  the  two  schools. 

A  schedule  of  eleven  games  was  originally  arranged,  but  only  eight  were  played  off.  The 
team  won  its  first  game  on  January  sixteenth  against  the  Rindge  Technical  School  of  Cambridge, 
Mass.,  by  the  score  of  3  to  1.  The  second  game  resulted  in  a  defeat  for  Exeter  at  the  hands  of  the 
Brookline  High  School,  the  score  being  2  to  0.  On  the  following  Wednesday  the  team  defeated  the 
Cambridge  Latin  School  by  the  score  of  2  to  1 .  At  Cambridge  on  the  twenty-sixth  the  team  suc- 
cumbed in  a  rather  one-sided  game  to  the  Harvard  Freshman  team  6  to  0.    One  of  the  fastest 


265 


games  of  the  year  followed  on  the  thirtieth  against  the  Melrose  Hockey  team  when  Exeter  finally 
lost  1  to  0  after  three  overtime  periods.  In  the  next  game  the  St.  Paul's  School  championship 
team  scored  a  decisive  10-0  victory  over  the  Exeter  team. 

The  annual  Andover  game  was  originally  scheduled  for  February  ninth,  but  owing  to  weather 
conditions  it  was  not  played  until  the  sixteenth.  The  game  was  hotly  contested,  and  the  result 
was  in  doubt  until  the  final  whistle  blew.  Accurate  play  predominated  throughout,  and  the 
passing  was  very  much  in  evidence.  The  skating  of  Conlon  and  Gilroy  was  remarkable  as  was  the 
handling  of  the  puck  by  Captain  Powers.  Gratwick  and  Davis  starred  for  Andover.  Conlon  scored 
the  first  goal  for  Exeter  within  the  first  three  minutes  of  play.  During  the  first  part  of  the  game 
the  puck  was  kept  in  Andover's  territory  most  of  the  time.  A  short  time  after  Adams  evened  up 
the  score  for  Andover.  An  exciting  period  followed  until  Gratwick  shot  a  goal  for  Andover  within 
ten  seconds  of  the  end  of  the  half.  In  the  second  half  Captain  Dodd  made  the  score  3  to  1  by  a 
goal  after  four  minutes  of  play.  Rowley  brought  the  score  up  to  3  to  2  by  a  clever  shot  from  mid- 
rink  which  went  past  Davis  for  a  goal.  For  the  remainder  of  the  game  neither  goal  was  in  danger 
and  when  the  whistle  blew  the  puck  was  in  the  center  of  the  rink. 

The  last  game  of  the  season  was  played  on  the  twenty-second  of  February  against  Tufts  Col- 
lege, resulting  in  a  1-0  victory  for  the  Exeter  seven.  Commendation  is  due  to  Manager  Taylor 
for  the  excellent  schedule  arranged  through  his  efforts  and  to  Captain  Powers  and  the  rest  of  the 
hockey  squad  for  the  plucky  fight  which  they  put  up,  often  against  heavy  odds. 


Hockey  Season,  1918 

January  16 Exeter  3  .      liindge  Technical  School 

January  19 Exeter  0  Brookline  High  2 

January  23 Exeter  2  Cambridge  Latin  High    1 

January  26 Exeter  0  Harvard  Freshmen  6 

January  30 Exeter  0  Melrose  High  1 

February  2 Exeter  0  St.  Paul's  School  10 

February  16      Exeter  2  Andover  3 

February  22      Exeter  1  Tufts  College  0 


at  Exeter 

at  Exeter 

at  Exeter 

at  Cambridge 

at  Exeter 

at  Concord,  N.  H. 

at  Exeter 

at  Exeter 


Exeter  -  Andover  Hockey  Records 


E.  A. 

1913 game  cancelled 

1914 4         1 

1915 5         0 


K. 

1916 3 

1917 1 

1918 2 

Total 15 


A. 

0 

2 
3 


266 


Top  Row — Conlon,  Gilroy,  W.  W.  Vernon. 

Bottom  Row — Hunt,  Taylor,  Powers,  Burgess,  Rowley. 

HOCKEY  TEAM 

Exeter  -Artdover  Hockey 

EXETER  POSiTION  ANDOVER 

Conlon right  wing Temple,  Chitwick 

Rowley center        Dodd  (capt.) 

Powers  (capt.) rover      Adams 

Vernon , left  wing Gratwick 

Hunt right  defense Kahn 

Gilroy left  defense Wilson 

Burgess goal Davis 

Score — Andover,  3;  Exeter  2.  Goals — Adams,  Gratwick,  Dodd,  Conlon,  Rowley.  Referee — 
Dr.  G.  W.  Tingley.  Goal  Umpires — Scammon,  Andover;  Cantillon,  Exeter.  Timers — Dr.  P. 
Page  and  H.  A.  Ross.    Time — Two  20-minute  halves. 


267 


Hockey  Squad 


Captain 
W.  S.  Powers,  '19 

THE  SQUAD 
A.  E.  Burgess,  '21       F.  N.  Dillon,  Jr.,  '19  C.  M.  Mayo,  '19 
W.  D.  Cantillon,  '20  R.  C.  Gilroy,  '19         E.  G.  Murray,  '20 
A.  J.  Conlon,  '19         W.  E.  Hunt,  '20  C.  B.  Myers,  '20 

A.  G.  Cooper,  '19        Corliss  Lamont,  '20  W.  S.  Powers,  '19 


Manager 
T.  M.  Taylor,  '18 

F.  H.  Rowley,  '20 
George  Sherrill,  Jr.,   '20 
W.  W.  Vernon,  '19 


Class  Hockey 


OWING  to  the  late  start  and  the  poor  condition  of  the  ice,  the  class  hockey  series  was  not 
completed  this  year  and  the  championship,  therefore,  never  decided.     The  Lower  Middle 
team  seemed  to  show  evidence  of  speed  and  ability  and  gave  promise  of  winning  the  series. 
On  February  23,  the  1918  team  won  over  1921  by  2  to  0.    On  February  27,  1920  won  over  1919 
by  4  to  2.    No  other  games  were  played. 


Class  Hockey  Teams 


1921 

J.  L.  Blake 

Buckley  Hubbard 

B.  W.  Colfelt 

.    .    .     J.  W.  Cook 

.    .    .      L.  L.  Robb 


1918 

S.  P.  Smedley ,  captain 

J.  M.  McClenahan manager 

A.  F.  Erikson center 

W.  G.  Dow      right  wing 

S.  P.  Smedley point 

J.  M.  McClenahan left  wing J.  L.  Blake 

R.  P.  Hoagland,  Jr rover      Kellogg  Marvin 

L.  E.  Mulloy cover  point Woodbury  Howard 

C.  B.  P.  Cobb goal B.  V.  McAdams 

R.  W.  Berkeley substitute 

A.  P.  Lang      substitute 

1920  1919 

F.  N.  Rix captain F.  N.  Dillon,  Jr. 

R.  L.  Bean      manager E.  N.  Cutler 

R.  A.  Downey,  Jr center E.  O.  Pride 

D.  H.  McConnell,  Jr right  wing T.  C.  Pratt 

T.  L.  Mullen point J.  P.  Clough 

L.  T.  Copeland left  wing H.  P.  Smith 

F.  N.  Rix rover W.  C.  Moore 

J.  W.  Purcell cover  point J.  H.  Gulick 

G.  J.  McAdams goal B.  S.  Cogan 

H.  K.  Olmsted substitute     Newcomb  Fuller 

John  Bellows substitute     D.  E.  Hewat 


268 


*  r*   T 


Captain  Beattie 


jflSFftwss 


T 


1     i 


^HE  1917  tennis  team  proved  its  worth  by 
victories  in  both  the  matches  of  the  season. 
Discouraging  weather  conditions  allowed 
little  practice,  but  the  team  of  veterans  with  the 
training  of  Coach  Perkins  overcame  this  lack. 
Father  Pluvius  and  Mars  caused  the  cancellations 
of  the  annual  Andover,  Freshmen  and  Harvard 
Interscholastic  matches,  so  that  the  only  two 
matches  played  were  with  English  High  and  St. 
Paul's  School.  English  High  was  easily  outplayed. 
In  the  St.  Paul's  match,  which  was  the  letter  match 
this  year,  it  was  not  such  an  easy  matter.  Exeter 
came  out  on  top,  however,  with  the  score,  5-4. 
Thanks  for  the  short,  but  successful  season  is  due  to 
Coach  Perkins,  Captain  Beattie,  Manager  Ingersoll 
and  all  the  members  of  the  tennis  squad. 


Tennis  Season,  1917 


Manager  Ingersoll 


May  16      At  Exeter  Exeter  7 

June  9 At  Concord        Exeter  5 


English  High  School  of  Boston  0 
St.  Paul's  School  (Letter  Match)  4 


Several  matches  cancelled,  including  matches  with  M.   1.  T.  and  Dartmouth  Freshmen, 
Andover,  and  Harvard  Interscholastics. 

Academy  Tennis  Team,  1917 


Captain 
M.  B.  Beattie,  '17 


Manager 
W.  F.  Ingersoll,  '17 


MEMBERS 


J.  T.  Babb,  '20 
M.  B.  Beattie,  '17 


Harold  Helm,  '17 
C    P.  Holmes,  '18 


J.  F.  Lewis,  Jr.,  '17  R.  A.  Martinsen,  '17 
W.  G.  Lowe,  '17         F.  T.  P.  Plimpton,  '17 


269 


Top  Row — Lindsay,  Murphy. 

Center  Row—W.  W.  Vernon,  L.  B.  Marshall,  J.  R.  Elliott,  Gilbert,  Officer. 

Bottom  Row — Shepard,  Lowe,  Damon.  C.  P.  Holmes.  Babb,  Moore. 

Tennis  Squad 

Captain 

C.  P.  Holmes,  '18 

Manager 

C.  F.  Peters,  '18,*     S.  B.  Damon,  '18 


.1.  T.   Babb,  '20 
J.  R.  Draper,  '18 
J.  R.  Elliott,  Jr.   '18 
T.  M.  Gilbert,  Jr.,  '19 


R.  B.  Lindsay,  '19 

W.  G.  Lowe,  '18 

L.  B   Marshall,  '18 

W.  C.  Moore,  '19 


'Resigned 


H.  W.  Murphy,  '19 
D.  N.  Officer,  '20 
I).  D.  Sawyer,  '19 
A.  A.  Shepard,  '19 
VV.  W.  Vernon,  '19. 


Tennis  Schedule,  1918 

May  4    .  .  Harvard  1921  at  Cambridge 

May  8    .  .  Boston  English  High        at  Exeter 

May  10,  1 1  Harvard  Interscholastics  at  Cambridge 

May  18  .  Tcohnologyl921  at  Exeter 

May  29  .  Huntington  High  School  at  Exeter 

June  1    .  .  Andover  at  Exeter 

June  15  .  Brookline  High  at  Exeter 


Captain   Holmes 


Manager  Duncan 


270 


u  y 


AT  the  end  of  the  1917  season  Exeter  could 
well  be  proud  of  her  golf  team.  Five  vic- 
tories and  no  defeats  is  an  enviable  record, 
and  especially  so  when  made  in  the  face  of  dis- 
couraging and  unusual  handicaps.  As  a  precau- 
tionary measure,  because  of  the  infantile  paralysis 
epidemic  no  matches  were  scheduled  for  the  fall 
and,  in  the  spring,  many  of  the  squad  were  attracted 
into  the  newly-formed  battalion.  Moreover,  the 
loss  of  Captain  Duncan,  who  was  unable  to  play 
during  most  of  the  season,  was  keenly  felt  and  poor 
weather  conditions  caused  frequent  revisions  in 
the  schedule.  The  best  match  of  the  season  was 
that  with  the  Portland  Golf  Club,  which  succumbed 
to  Exeter,  14  to  5,  in  a  spirited  match  in  which  the 
Academy  team  was  seen  at  its  best.  Congratula- 
tions are  due  Mr.  Crosbie,  Captain  Duncan  and 
Manager  Underwood  for  developing  what  was 
probably  the  best  team  that  ever  represented  Exeter 
in  this  sport. 


^1 


Captain  Duncan 

Manager  Underwood 

Golf  Season,  1917 

April  28     .    . 

.    .      Exeter  14            Watertown  High  6 

at  Exeter 

May  19      .    . 

.    .      Exeter  19            Middlebrook  Golf  Club  0 

at  Exeter 

May  26      .    . 

.    .      Exeter  14            Portland  Golf  Club  5 

at  Exeter 

June  2    .    .    . 

.    .      Exeter  14  1-2      Fessenden  School  1-2 

at  West  Newton,  Mass 

June  9    .    .    . 

.    .      Exeter  21  1-2     Middlebrook  Golf  Club  16  1-2 

at  Dover,  N.  H. 

Captain,  E.  B.  Duncan,  '17 
E.  B.  Carrtjth,  '19 
A.  G.  Cooper,  '19 


Golf  Team,  1917 

Coach,  Mr.  L.  M.  Crosbie 
E.  B.  Duncan,  '17 
Robert  Hilton,  '17 


Manager,  G.  C.  Underwood,  '17 
J.  W.  Sweetser,  '19 

R.    L.    WlNTRINGER,    '19 


271 


Top  Row — Wintringer,  Ballard. 

Bottom  Row — Sweetscr,  Webster,  Cooper,  Carruth. 

GOLF  TEAM 


Captain 
A.  G.  Cooper 

J.  Y.  Ballard 
H.  0.  Clement 

E.  B.  Carruth 
J.  H.  Chase 
A.  G.  Cooper 
D.  N.  Davidson 

P.  F.  Adler 
S.  D.  Brown 
T.  L.  Conway 
D.  T.  Davis,  Jr. 

W.  M.  Sears 
*Resigned 


Golf  Squad 


Manager 
Stephen  Webster,*  P.  G.  Kimball 

1918 
P.  G.  Kimball  J.  L.  Marston 

W.  G.  Lowe  R.  L.  Wiel 

1919 
J.  C.  Glenn 
J.  H.  Gulick 
H.  P.  Hedges 
T.  Hilton 

1920 
W.  T.  Dixon 
W.  B.  Franklin,  Jr. 
D.  P-  Geddes 

1921 
G.  Sherrill,  Jr. 


A.  II.  C.  Ohse 
A.  A.  Shepard 
W.  E.  Stearns 


G.  W.  Lewis,  Jr. 
P.  A.  Marston 
A.  C.  Schroll 


272 


; 


BOWLING 


jMgffiflflasf* 


THE  interest  which  was  evident  in  bowling  last  year  was  kept  up  this  winter  when  the  old 
alleys  and  equipment  of  the  old  gymnasium  were  used  probably  for  the  last  time.    The 
Upper  Middlers  furnished  the  most  consistent  bowlers  and  won  the  tournament,     the 
bowling  of  Captain  Wintringer  and  Sweetser  of  the  Uppers  was  excellent.     Roger  Birtwell,'18, 
for  the  second  year  made  high  average  and  high  three-string  total. 


Results  of  Tournament 

1919 20 

1918 |" 

1921 


Tournament  Records 

High  Average RoGER  Bibtwbix, 

High  3-String  Total RoGER  Bihtwell, 

High  Single  String Gbobgb  Sherrill, 

Individual  Total  Pinf all E.  W.  Guion,    20 

High  Team  Single  String  Total 1919 

High  Team  3-String  Total 1919 


LOST 

PER  CENT 

7 

.741 

13 

.519 

17 

.370 

17 

.370 

'18 

165  1 

'18 

543 

Jr., 

'21    232 

4,322 

837 

2,315 

273 


Top  Row — K.  Stoddard,  J.  R.  Elliott,  Jr..  Sawyer,  Sweetser,  Gove. 
Bottom  Row — Hickey,  Wintringer. 

1919  BOWLING  TEAM 

Class  Botuling  Teams 

1919 

Captain      R.  L.  Wintringer 

Manager D.  S.  Hickey 

K.  L.  Gove  Kenneth  Stoddard  R.  L.  Wintringer 

J.  R.  Elliott,  Jr.  J.  W.  Sweetser 

Substitutes,  D.  D.  Sawyer,  T.  K.  O'Brien 

1918 

Captain      Roger  Birtwell 

Manager E.  C.  Bonn  ell 

Roger  Birtwell  C.  P.  Holmes  H.  E  Rice,  Jr. 

R.  P.  Hoagland,  Jr.  Thomas  Oxnard 

Substitutes,  C.  B.  P.  Cobb,  C.  W.  DeVito,  R.  G.  Johnson,  R.  L.  Wiel 

1920 

Captain      R.  L.  Bean 

Manager ■ R.  H.  Jones 

R.  L.  Bean  E.  W.  Guion  F.  H.  Owen,  Jr. 

John  Bellows  G.  W.  Kennedy 

Substitutes,  R.  H.  Jones,  S.  H.  Libby,  G.  J.  McAdams,  F.  N.  Rix 

1921 

Captain Buckley  Hubbard 

Manager J.  G.  Bean 

R.  M.  Deane  J.  T.  Myers  H.  L.  Spooner 

Buckley  Hubbard  George  Sherrill,  Jr. 

Substitutes,  A.  G.  Avery,  B.  D.  Bennett,  F.  C.  A.  Robinson 


274 


Captain 


F.  E. 


THE  1918  Gym  team  was  chiefly  noteworthy 
for  its  non-existence.  A  long  series  of  mis- 
fortunes, culminating  in  the  sickness  of 
Captain  Wright  and  the  cancelling  of  the  Harvard 
Interscholastic  Gymnastic  meet,  was  responsible  for 
the  failure  to  continue  Exeter's  splendid  record  of 
the  past  in  this  sport.  A  gym  squad  was  formed  to 
practice  on  Wednesday  and  Saturday  afternoons 
during  the  Winter  Term,  and  some  good,  though 
almost  entirely  new  and  inexperienced,  material 
was  developed.  We  wish  to  thank  Coach  Pearson 
for  the  training  he  gave  the  squad,  the  squad  for 
the  spirit  they  showed  in  coming  out,  and  Manager 
Holmes  for  his  unrewarded  efforts  to  secure  a 
schedule.  While  regretting  that  the  Academy  was 
not  represented  in  this  sport  in  1918,  we  hope  that 
next  year  when  the  splendid  equipment  of  the  new 
gym  will  be  available  for  the  first  time,  Exeter  will 
again  have  the  opportunity  to  develop  a  team  capa- 
ble of  winning  the  interscholastic  gymnastic  cham- 


-v                pionship. 

<a*^^^ 

Wright 

Gym.  Squad 

Coach  Pearson 

Captain 

Coach 

Manager 

Wright,  Jr.,  '18 

Oscar  W.  Pearson 

C.  P.  Holmes,  '18 

THE  SQUAD 
W.  I.  Aderer,  '20       A.  F.  Hall,  Jr.,  '20     D.  R.  MacLaren,  '21     J.  R.  Weist,  '19 
W.  C.  Andre,  '20       A.  P.  Lang,  '13  L.  E.  Mulloy,  '18  F,  E,  Wright,  Jr.,  '18 

R.  H.  Burke,  '20       R.  K.  MacKaye,  '19 


275 


G.  P.  Eager 
*Resigned 


F.  A.  Garside 
C.  P.  Holmes 


Mayo,  R.  G.  Smith,  Eaton,  Ea;,'cr,  Shepard.  r 

Cheer  Leaders 

C.  F.  Eaton,  Jr.,*  R.  G.  Smith,  Leader 
T.  E.  Jones  D.  B.  Lourie  A.  A.  Shepard 

C.  M.  Mayo,  Song  Leader 

P.  E.  A.  Police 

Chief,  C.  P.  Holmes 

W.  E.  McCaw,  Jr.  T.  M.  Taylor 

Troy  Combs 


Eaton,  C.  P.  Holmes,  Taylor. 


276 


The  Peal 


JUNE  BALL  NUMBER 


PRICELESS 


Notice  to  Reader 


When  you  finish  reading  this  magazine,  stamp 
Vol   I   No    I      June  24       a  kiss  upon  the  lips  of  your  best  girl,  tell  her 
'  '      you've  enlisted  to  fight  the  Kaiser,  or  are  going 

to  train  or  farm  or  serve  in  one  of  the  1,000  ways 
you  can  this  summer  for  Uncle  Sam,  thus  help- 
ing the  soldiers  and  sailors  overseas. 

No  Slackers  !        Fight  the  Huns. I 
Damn  the  Kaiser  ! 


1918 


THE  JUNE  BALL  GIRL 


The 

Greatest  Mother 

in    t(xe    W3RLD 


Do  you  realize  that  every  cent  of  every  dollar  received  for  the 
Red  Cross  War  Fund  is  spent  for  War  Relief? 


^-^^ 


!  l!i",v 

Li  :  i 


Cfje  American  Creeb 

I  BELIE V E  in  the  United  States  of  America  as  a  govern- 
ment or  the  people,  by  the  people,  for  trie  people  ;  whose 
just  powers  are  derived  from  the  consent  of  trie  gov- 
erned ;  a  democracy  in  a  republic ;  a  sovereign  nation  of 
many  sovereign  States ;  a  perfect  Union,  one  and  insepar- 
able; established  upon  those  principles  of  freedom,  equality, 
justice  and  humanity  for  which  American  patriots  sacrificed 
their  lives  and  fortunes. 

I  therefore  believe  it  is  my  duty  to  my  country  to  love 
it,  to  support  its  Constitution,  to  obey  its  laws,  to  respect  its 
flag,  and  to  defend  it  against  all  enemies. 

WILLIAM  TYLER  PAGE. 

Donated  by  a  friend 


William  Tyler  Page,  a  descendant  of  a  President  of  the  United  States,  John 
Tvler  and  of  a  signer  of  the  American  Declaration  of  Independence,  Carter  Braxton, 
was  born  in  Frederick,  Md.,  the  birthplace  of  Francis  Scott  Key,  and  attended  the 
public  schools  of  Baltimore.  He  is  a  resident  of  Friendship  Heights,  Md.,  near  Wash- 
ington, and  won  the  prize  of  $1000  offered  by  the  City  of  Baltimore  in  a  National 
Citizens  Creed  Contest  approved  by  President  Wilson. 


280 


£H  !• 


U 


Phillips  rLxeter  Academy  Life 


VOLUME  I 


JUNE  24,  1918 


NUMBER  1 


PEALERS 

Head  Bugler Jay  Jay  Bags 

Caroller      Cow  Hide  Hugglestone 

Trombone Darwin  Physic  Smartin 

Clarinet      Will  Soakum  Howlandy'ell 

Cornelists    .   Bryant  Franklin  Washington  Jefferson  Tulles,  A.b.c.d.e.f.g.  Cop 
J.  H    Terrier,  Yon  Yonson,  Mudpool  Bininit 

Published  when  the  spirit  moves  by  students    of  the  Phillips    Exeter  Academy.     Subscrip- 
tion price,  free  with  Pean  this  year.    This  "Peal"  is  not  entered  as  second-class  matter. 

Printed  by  the  News-Letter  Press,  Exeter,  N.  H. 


My  June  Ball  Girl 


The  dainty  archness  of  your  smile, 

My  June  Ball  Girl, 
The  laughing  twinkle  in  your  eye, 
The  flaming  gold  that's  in  your  hair, 
The  ruby  richness  of  your  lips, 
The  lily  whiteness  of  your  throat, 
The  covert  firmness  of  your  chin, 
The  low,  sweet  words  I  hear  you  speak, 
Your  grace  of  movement  in  the  dance, — 


These,  true,  are  potent  reasons  why 
I  feel  with  such  ecstatic  joy 
The  trembling  pressure  of  your  hand; 
But  more  than  these,  the  fire  of  war 
That  shines  from  out  your  twinkling  eye, 
The  love  you  bear  America, — 
This  is  what  counts,  and  makes  you  mine, 
My  June  Ball  Girl. 

S.  H.  W. 


281 


UV7. 


inJmwmS 


IOKA  THEATRE  ON  FRIDAY  NIGHTS 


282 


^Tfte    Xrtcj      ,n    5teiHi--    JuHE  I- 


Exeter  Academy  Records 


Event 
"Trotting"  Latin 

"Bull"  throwing 

Crabbing 

Eating  lunch 

Bluffing 

Taking  showers 

Prepishness 

Flunking 


High  Jump 


Holder 
L.  Wheeler 

C.  Day 

D.  R.  Martin 
J.  J.  Sack 
Alumni  boarder 
Lenahan 
Hilton 
Mitch  am 
Wheeler 
Day 

SWEEZY 

Geddes 


Time 
Night 
Night 

All  the  time 
2  to  12  p.  m. 
42  2-5  sec. 
7.15  to  8  p.  » 
8.01  p.  m. 
Any  time 
No  time 
No  time 
No  time 
6  ft.,  7  in. 


Place 
Webster 
Webster 
Everywhere 
Pean  office 
Alumni 

Golden  Branch  Room 
Dunbar 
Dunbar 

Academy  Building 
Academy  Building 
Academy  Building 
P.  E.  A. 


Clark  vs.  Gobey 

Dr.  Clark. — -"What  is  the  construction 
after  miseretf" 

Gobey. — "  You  know,  Dr.  Clark,  you 
know! 

Dr.  Clark  (after  listening  to  the  murder- 
ing of  Vergil). — "Sit  down!" 

Gobey. — "O  jiminy!  Dr.  Clark,  you  got 
me  all  mixed  up! 

Dr.  Clark. — "I'll  flunk  anyone  who  can't 
give  the  sequence  of  tenses." 


Gobey  (sympathetically). — "I'm  afraid, 
Dr.  Clark,  ycm'11  have  to  flunk  me  this 
month." 

Mr.  Cushwa  — "Dr.  Clark  tells  me  you 
don't  know  the  first  thing  about  Latin.  " 

Gobey. — "Gee!  Mr.  Cushwa,  that's  the 
very  same  thing  he  told  me! " 

Keep  your  shoes  shined!  You  can  shine 
at  one  end  if  not  at  the  other! 

Love. — "The  idea,  my  napkin  is  damp." 
Hurst. — "Perhaps  it's  because  there  is  so 
much  due  on  your  board." 


283 


SIDELIGHTS  ON  ATHLETICS 


284 


"Pears"  Title  Contest 

For  the  best  title  to  the  picture  on  this  page 

The  "Peal"  will  award  prizes  as 
follows: 

First  Prize One  sweet  potato 

Second  Prize      $150.00 

Third  Prize One  shoestring 

With  Special  Prizes  for  Those  in  the  Battalion 
and  Those  Not  out  for  Military  Training 

The  contest  will  be  governed  by  the  fol- 
lowing 

CONDITIONS 

1,  The  title  should  be  written  on  a  deli- 
cate shade  of  lavender  paper  with  an  indelible 
green  pencil;  other  shades  harmonizing  well 
may  be  substituted,  but  no  great  preference 
will  be  given  to  the  specified  ones. 

2..  The  title  must  not  be  not  less  than  two 
thousand  words  in  length.  The  use  of 
hyphenated  words  only  is  permitted.  Con- 
testants must  send  in  at  least  eight  titles. 

3.  The  contest  is  not  now  open. 

4.  Unless  the  title  is  entirely  the  work  of 
some  person  or  persons  (preferably  persons) 
absolutely  unknown  to  and  unheard  of  by  the 


contestant,  it  will  surely  be  either  discarded 
or  retained.  Great  attention  should  be  given 
to  this  condition. 

5.  No  students  who  are  on  Senate  at  the 
time  this  number  of  the  "Peal"  goes  to  press 
will  be  allowed  to  compete  in  this  contest; 
one  of  our  faculty  friends  insists  that  we  in- 
sert this  condition  which  will,  he  declares, 
prove  of  inestimable  value  to  ex-Senators, 
enabling  them  to  crow  over  their  former 
mates.  As  much  as  we  despise  this  attitude 
in  one  of  our  faculty,  we  are  helpless  to  com- 
bat his  iron  will,  so  we  comply. 

G.  No  members  not  on  the  Pean  board 
will  not  be  allowed  not  to  compete. 

7.  In  case  of  ties  no  prizes  will  be  awarded. 

8.  Only  contestants  who  buy  six  copies  of 
the  "Peal"  regularly  are  allowed  to  compete. 

9.  All  manuscripts  should  be  addressed 
to  the  editor,  care  of  A.  E.  F.,  Paris,  France. 
No  envelope  container  which  has  anything 
written  on  it  will  be  accepted. 

10.  The  later  you  send  your  title  the  better. 
In  previous  contests,  many  arrived  before  the 
contests  closed  and  so  received  no  prizes. 

One  of  Mr.  Benton's  Victims. — "If 
Ivanhoe  costs  sixty  cents  at  Batchelder's, 
how  much  is  Kenilworth?" 

Mr.  Benton. — "Great  Scott!  What  a 
novel  question!" 


285 


x\ 


Temptation 

Vibrant  eyes  of  living  blackness, 
Veiled  stars  of  youth  and  love-light, 
Shrouded  fires  of  lustrous  beauty, 
Curtained  by  their  drooping  lashes — 
Tresses  black,  as  if  by  magic 
Forming  crown,  though  plain  exceeding, 
Gracing,  yet,  her  face  beneath  it — 
Angel  features,  deftly  carven 
From  some  olive  tinted  marble, 
Showing  faintest,  fairest  rose-blush, 
Just  as  if  a  glorious  sunset 
Touched  a  really  perfect  colour, 
Made  the  perfect  colour  finer — 
Lips  of  mocking,  tempting  softness, 
Calling,  pleading,  yet  repelling 
Aught  to  touch  their  sacred  wonder — 
Gods  of  Love!    And  gods  of  Beauty! 
Do  you  tempt  me?  S.  H.  W. 

Plays  and  Players 

The  Eyes  of  Youth Love 

Cheer  Up Eager 

A  Tailor  Made  Man Lowe 

Chu  Chin  Chow Arthachinta 

Business  Before  Pleasure Sack 

Seventeen Rowley 

The  Little  Teacher Day 

A  Cure  for  Curables Lourie 

Sick-a-Bed      Wakefield 

Why  Marry?      Martin 

The  Man  Who  Stayed  at  Home     .    .   Cooper 
The  Fountain  of  Youth   ....         Wheeler 

Of  all  the  words  of  tongue  or  pen 
That  ever  came  to  prep  school  men 
The  best  are  these — -I  know,  by  heck; 
"Enclosed,  dear  son,  you'll  find  a  check." 


"Peanocky" 

'Twas  Swasey;  and  the  Gobey  Reed 
Was  Slack  and  Gorby  in  the  Poole, 
The  Sada  Bean  was  Green  and  Brown, 
But  the  "Peanock"  was  Roaf  and  Sewall. 

Beware  the  "Peanock,"  my  son. 
Its  Eager  Hunt,  its  Hidden  Powers, 
Its  Logic  Lunge,  its  Lyford  Head, 
Its  secret  Glenn  within  our  Bowers. 

He  took  his  Buttrick  sword  in  Hand, 
For  many  a  Day  and  Knight  he  sought, 
By  many  a  Bvshee  Pond  he  passed, 
At  length  he  stood  awhile  in  thought. 

And  while  in  Wilkie  thought  he  stood, 
The  monster  Swift  with  eyes  of  flame, 
Came  Creighlon  through  the  Underwood 
With  Bellows  as  it  came. 

One,  two;  one,  two;  and  through  and  through 
The  Rowley  blade  went  Baker  Black, 
He  left  it  dead  and  with  its  Head 
The  Smith  went  Cooley  back. 

And  has't  thou  killed  the  "Peanock," 
My  Sweezy  boy,  my  Darling  son? 
Are  Savage  Chew,  and  Phinney  Gill 
Forever  dead,  my  Zelie  are? 

'Twas  Swasey;    and  the  Gobey  Reed 
Was  Slack  and  Gorby  in  the  Poole; 
The  Sada  Bean  was  Green  and  Brown, 
But  the  "Peanock"  was  Roaf  and  Sewall. 


She  frowned  on  him  and  called  him  Mr. 
Because  in  fun  he  merrily  Kr. 
And  in  spite  the  following  night 
That  awful  Mr.  Kr.  Sr. — Peruvian. 


He  called  her  lily,  violet,  rose, 
And  all  the  flowers  of  spring. 
She  said,  "I  can't  be  all  of  those. 
You  lilac  everything." — Peruvian. 


286 


Slang  Slung  at  Exeter 

Alumni:  The  place  where  an  ancient  sea-gull 
is  called  "chicken  a  la  king;"  the  "bean- 
ery." 

Athlete  (Morris  Chair):  One  who  knows 
more  about  cigarettes  than  football;  an 
inhabitant  of  Hoyt,  Soule,  Peabody,  Webs- 
ter or  Gilman. 

Athlete  (real):  One  who,  as  a  member  of  a 
P.  E.  A.  team,  practices  on  our  opponents. 

A .  Awful  work — a  mark  seldom  given  in 
Exeter. 

Bone  (n):  A  mistake;  usually  some  inad- 
vertent remark. 

Bone  (v):  To  grind;  to  believe  in  books  as  a 
method  of  education  (very  unpopular). 

Bean:  The  part  of  the  body  immediately 
above  the  torso  (often  vacant). 

Bull:  Persiflage;  the  gentle  art  of  camou- 
flaging and  hyperbolizing  the  truth. 

Butt:  A  cigarette  (except  Lucky  Strike) ;  the 
south  end  of  anything  going  north. 

B:    Bad  work,  but  better  than  A. 

Chapel:      Fifteen    minutes    of    concentrated 
study,  under  difficulties. 

Cut:  Absence  of  a  student  who  is  ignorant  of 
persiflage. 

Craps:  African  golf;  rolling  the  bones;  a 
losing  game. 

Cancellation  Asinorum:  Bacteria  preporum, 
favorite  gin  phiz  of  math  profs. 

Crack  (a  book):  To  study;  &  faux  pas,  not 
done  in  the  best  circles. 

Crown:    To  throw  a  brick  on  someone's  bean. 

C:   creditable  work. 

:      A    familiar    expression    of 

praise  or  condemnation. 

Dope:    Information  (often  false). 

Dolled  Up:  Wearing  the  glad  rags;  prepara- 
tion made  for  an  A  in  declamation. 

D:    Deserving  work. 

E  (1):    What  we  all  desire,  but  don't  get. 

E  (2):    What  we  all  get,  but  don't  desire. 

Exeter  Hop:    Fern.  Sem.  dance. 

E:  Excellent  work,  a  mark  very  often  given 
at  Exeter. 

Flunk:    To  get  the  only  vowel  in  Exeter. 


Fox  (v):     To  put  something  over  on  some- 
body. 
F.  S.  T.:    The  Golden  Branch  motto;  trans- 
lated  by   G.    L.   Soule   to  mean,    "Fools 

Stick  Together." 
Fern.  Sem.:     Our  sister-school,  but  not  our 

sister's  school;    Robinson   Female   Semi- 
nary. 
Fruit:    Anyone  you  don't  like. 
Fusser:    One  who  fusses  and  fumes  in  dressing 

for  two  hours  to  be  with  a  girl  for  one  hour. 
Guy:  Anyone  of  the  male  sex. 
Grind  (v):   To  expend  energy  on  books  of  an 

educational  nature. 
Grind  (n.):   One  who  gets  up  at  .5.00  a.  m.  to 

study  his  next  week's  exam. 
Got  it:    To  pass  an  exam. 
Gaul:     Gall,  a  famous  medicinal  compound 

invented  by  Mr.  Cfesar,  several  centuries 

ago. 
Girl:      Miss,    Kiss,    Bliss;     Glance,    Dance, 

Prance. 
Hog:     One  who  accumulates  all  the  food  at 

table. 
Horse:    See  trot. 
Klout    (v.):    To  slam,   wallop,    bean,    crack 

a  la  gonk. 
Kill  (an  exam.):     To  pull  anything  .from  a 

D— 3  to  an  A  + . 
Loafer:    One  who  does  less  than  the  minimum 

amount  of  work. 
Lowbrow:    The  opposite  of  highbrow. 
Prep.'    The  acme  of  contempt. 
Prep:    A  Junior:   a  denizen  of  Dunbar. 
Prepishness:    Acting  like  a  denizen  of  Dunbar. 
P.  E.  A.:    The  grand  old  school. 
Prof.:     A  supposedly  superior,   semi-human 

creature,  who  rules  our  destinies;   visually 

a  nuisance. 
Razz:    To  kid  along,  to  spoof. 
Razoo   Club:     A  bunch   of  old    fellows   who 

teach  particularly  obnoxious  preps  their 

place. 
Roughneck:      A    term    of    endearment    to    a 

friend;    the  reverse  to  an  enemy. 
Shoot,  the  bull:  To  throw  out  a  long  and  heavy 

line. 
Shot:   To  feel  like  a  Luckv  Strike  smoker. 


287 


Study  Hall:    (see  Senate). 

Senate:  The  meeting  place  and  meeting  of  a 
body  of  notable  "E"  men,  where  "ignor- 
ance is  bliss." 

Trot:    See  horse  (obsolete). 

Z  (especially  the  Chinese  variety):  The  fav- 
orite mark  of  some  profs.;  a  sarcastic 
"E." 

Daffydils 

"Wiggle,  wiggle,  "  sobbed  the  Webster  Hall 
frankfurter  as  it  disappeared  between  the 
fair  lips  of  the  fair  one,  and  in  kissing  them 
became  amorous.  "If  my  lady  wished  to 
go  to  the  dance  would  Ohse  Walker,  or 
Lowe  Wheeler,  and  Cole  Spooner  or  would 
Roche  Cutter?"    Archibald,  pass  the  milk! 

Songs  and  Their  Singers 

Dance  and  Grow  Thin     ...     G.  P.  Eager 

Who  Do  You  Love W.  Fowler 

Homeward  Bound  ....  All  Seniors 
Where  do  We  Go  From  Here 

Weldon  and  Hastings 

We're  Going  Over 

Andrews  and  Wintringer 

Long  Boy Geddes 

The  Sunshine  of  Your  Smile  .  .  .  Conlon 
They  Go  Wild  Over  Me  .  .  D.  B.  Lourie 
There's  a  Long,  Long,  Trail    .        Mr.  Libby 

Pretty  Baby Burleigh 

Liberty  Bell Al  Phinney 

Just  a  Baby's  Prayer  at  Twilight 

All  Dunbar 

I  Don't  Want  to  Get  Well  .    .   J.  G.  Curtis 

Phinney  (written  translation  of  French). — 
"And  as  he  dropped  a  bouquet  at  this  beau- 
tiful fire  of  artifice,  you  have  shown  him,  as 
two  and  two  make  four,  as  you  did  not  make 
each  case  of  his  courage  stopping  a  duel, 
which  would  not  have  taken  place. " 

Johnson  had  a  little  cat 

They  say  it  sang  like  Caruso 

But  Terry  hit  it  with  a  rock 
And  now  it  doesn't  do  so. 


Flunking  Song 

When  we  go  flunking 

And  the.  profs,  begin  to  give  us  E,  E,  E,  E's, 

Can  we  ever  face  the  music 

When  father  gets  us  flat  upon  his  knees. 

Things  as  They  Might  Be 

1.  Well,  Mr.  Sweet,  I  was  so  interested  in 
the  last  number  of  Snappy  Stories,  that  I 
really  thought  I  would  not  prepare  my  Trig, 
lesson. 

2.  Mr.  Kirtland,  I  wish  to  be  excused  from 
Latin  this  week,  because  I  have  lost  my 
"trot"  and  Batchelder's  are. all  sold  out. 

3.  No,  Mr.  Ford,  I  have  no  friends  in 
Boston,  but  I  would  like  to  take  in  the  town, 
and  it  is  rumored  that  there  are  some  fine 
shows  there  this  winter. 

4.  I  just  made  the  Second  Honor  Group 
last  term,  but  I  didn't  crack  a  book.  This 
term  I  am  going  to  study  to  try  and  get  better 
marks. 

5.  Yes,  Mr.  Selleck,  I  woke  up  in  time; 
but  I  was  too  sleepy  to  get  up ;  and  I  really 
felt  that  I  needed  a  complete  rest. 

6.  Yes,  I  know  the  movies  will  be  good, 
but  I  want  to  do  a  little  extra  studying  in 
order  to  raise  my  marks  from  C  to  B. 

Eieter,  N.  H.,  May  Z.  \  1918 

Company   ..  H   has  received  the  follow- 
ing Tools  this  day  from  O,  M.  GtaiuB 

I05"st«*s  "Blisters 

.sS.fr.      Butting  Tnnln^A,K-":*7,f'' 
.-L€L  ...Wire  Cutters C*S<S  f- 

b     2i9i    Brush/SHor/SB- 
■O      //<-tV.     PiekE  JwlAf   WorcfS 

O.  C.  ff,  9,  C  .-.Coy. 

Try  This  on  Your  Silo 

Marshall. — "Bill  Gorby  looks  scared 
since  he  began  to  cultivate  that  new  mous- 
tache." 

Ted  Gilbert. — "Yes,  he  is  having  a  hair- 
raising  experience." 


Mr.  Fiske. — "What  is  the  unit  of  power?" 

Reed.— "What?" 

Mr  Fiske.— "That's  correct." 


Pete. — "Do  you  use  water  to  keep  your 
hair  in  shape?" 

Don. — "Sure,  I  have  a  wave  in  it." 


288 


A  Few  Fairies 


Mr.   J.    J.   Saok, 

o/o   The,  Phillips   Exeter   Aoademy, 

Exeter,   H.   H. 

Dear   Sir: 

Your   jitter   of  February   6th  has    Ju3t  been  received   at 
4   P.   M.    today.      7/e   are    sorry  that   we   cannot   be   of  9' 
assiatanoe   to  you    in    supplying  you    *lth   550   eopl- 
of  a   good   looking  girl-.      We,    however.   hav» 


Boston  Mass 

Mr.   Webber  will  not  meet  his 

February  7, 

1918. 

lasses   on  Thursday   and.  Friday,  Hay 
9th  and   10th. 

0  Jake,  when  is  thy  Harem? 


289 


A  STAG  JAG 


Jenrns 


-me.  LMituTM 


^2"Q^ 


Tmck 


prcw 


AT  THE  MOVIES 
GUESS  WHO'S  ON  SENATE 


OH!   ?tt rev!,  Wont- y»u tytibiiUt 


SOME  SUGGESTIONS  FOR  DRAWINGS  FOR  THE  1919 

PEAN 


Trotky     Ivgotonitch,    the     Bolsheviki 

leader,  who,  when  passing  thru  Exe- 
ter, saw  material  enough  to  form  a 
company  or  two  for  his  army 


290 


The  Book  of  Jerekuk 

CHAPTER   I 

1 .  Jerekuk  cometh  to  Exeter,  5  learneth  the 
customs,  14  and  spendeth  much  money.  17 
He  goeth  to  class,  21  and  is  elected  to  Senate. 

1.  Now  it  came  to  pass  in  the  eighteenth 
year  of  his  life,  in  the  ninth  month,  in  the 
fifteenth  day  of  the  month,  that  Jerekuk,  son 
of  Jehoahaz,  he  and  all  his  trunks  and  golf 
clubs  and  tennis  racket  and  family,  came 
against  Exeter;  yea,  verily,  by  the  Boston 
and  Maine  came  he;  and,  behold,  there  was  a 
mighty  sign  from  heaven,  for  the  train  was 
only  two  hours  late. 

2.  And  he  came  unto  a  new  dwelling  in  a 
strange  land  and  the  name  thereof  was  Hoyt. 

3.  Now  in  that  land  were  many  preps., 
and  the  land  was  given  to  prepishness. 

4.  And  there  Jerekuk  abode,  and  gat  unto 
himself  many  banners,  with  divers  inscrip- 
tions thereon,  and  many  daring  works  of  art 
wherewith  to  adorn  the  walls  of  his  dwelling 
place;  yea,  verily,  from  K.  Model  and  the 
Motion  Picture  Classic  did  he  get  them  all. 

5.  Now  in  the  beginning  Jerekuk  did  eat  at 
Alumni,  but  the  crash  of  the  battle  resounded 
round  about  him  and  there  was  much  weeping 
and  gnashing  of  teeth. 

6.  For  Jerekuk  ateth  beans  and  "chicken 
a  la  king." 

7.  And  upon  the  third  day  of  his  sojourn 
Jerekuk  did  buy  his  radiator;  for  the  sum  of 
five  skekels  bought  he  it. 

8.  But  Jerekuk  wot  not  wot  he  dideth. 

9.  And  it  came  to  pass  that  Jerekuk  sat 
foot  upon  Water  Street  and  wasted  his  sub- 
stance in  the  bazaars. 


10.  And  at  Batchelder's  many  books 
bought  he,  of  divers  colors,  red,  yellow,  blue, 
and  green. 

11.  But  before  many  days  were  spent  he 
did  learn  the  mysteries  of  the  fudge  and  the 
chocolate  float. 

12.  And  he  soon  tired  of  the  beans  and  of 
Alumni,  for  he  was  smitten  with  grievous 
pains. 

13.  And  henceforth  he  did  eat  at  the 
P.  E.  A.  and  did  spend  many  shekels  upon 
the  "Toastie." 

14.  But  behold  he  spent  his  money  as  a 
tale  that  is  told. 

15.  And  he  received,  on  the  following  day, 
a  magnanimous  check,  for  his  old  man  was 
a  plutocrat;  yea,  verily,  a  thousand  dollars 
in  his  sight  were  but  as  yesterday  when  it  is 
past,  and  as  a  watch  in  the  night. 

16.  And  as  the  days  passed,  Jerekuk  arose 
in  the  cold  grey  dawn,  when  the  "threes" 
were  ringing,  and  did  fling  a  raincoat  over  the 
tunic  of  the  night  and  hastened  his  footsteps 
unto  chapel. 

17.  And  in  the  third  hour  he  was  wont  to 
hear  the  teaching  of  the  Latin  tongue,  from 
the  lips  of  Pop  Clark  heard  he  it. 

18.  And  he  arose  to  translate,  but  was 
wont  to  sit  again  shortly. 

19.  Then  at  the  end  of  the  first  month  he 
received  a  report  and  many  E's  did  appear 
thereon,  for  he  knew  no  more  Latin  than  the 
birds  twit'ring  in  the  foliage. 

20.  And  it  came  to  pass  when  the  success 
of  Jerekuk  was  reported  in  his  former  dwelling 
place,  lo,  there  was  great  lamentation  and 
the  parents  of  Jerekuk  did  prepare  to  welcome 
him  when  he  should  return,  yea,  his  old  man 
did  get  himself  a  mighty  paddle  wherewith 
to  make  his  welcome  warm. 

21 .  Moreover,  the  elders  and  scribes  of  the 
<-  people  chose  Jerekuk  from  among  all  the  as- 
sembled princes,  and  captains,  and  stewards, 
and  mighty  men,  who  should  be  among  those 
to  go  to  Senate. 

22.  But  Jerekuk  gat  unto  himself  a  trot 
and  from  that  time  did  pass  his  Latin- 


291 


CHAPTER    II 

1 .  Jerekuk  goeth  on  a  vacation,  5  leaveth  so- 
ciety, 8  and  retumeth  to  school,  15  He  hath  a 
girl  for  the  twenty-second,  21  And  geteth  his 
marks. 

1.  And  it  came  to  pass  in  the  month 
Chislen,  when  the  snow  was  upon  the  moun- 
tains and  winter  was  begun  that  Jerekuk  did 
go  out  from  the  land  where  he  was  and  did 
journey  to  the  land  whither  he  had  come, 
unto  the  center  of  the  universe  about  which 
revolveth  the  heavens  and  earth,  yea,  even 
unto  Boston. 

2.  And  the  heart  of  Jerekuk  was  filled  with  a 
mighty  gladness;  and  the  natives  of  that  city 
did  marvel  at  the  speech  of  Jerekuk  and  at  his 
learning. 

3.  For  in  his  mind  were  many  words  which 
no  dictionary  hath  seen. 

4.  And  Jerekuk  did  go  into  society  and 
attended  the  tlie  dansant  and  seeth  the  Show 
of  Wonders,  and  the  heart  of  Jerekuk  took 
delight  in  the  beauty  of  the  daughters  of  the 
land. 

5.  But  in  society  Jerekuk  did  make  many 
woeful  breaks,  wherefore  he  forsook  society 
and  tore  himself  from  the  bosom  of-  his 
family,  for  he  was  seized  with  longing  in  his 
heart  for  the  dair  daughters  of  Eve. 

6.  And  Jerekuk  did  mount  into  his 
chariot,  yea,  into  his  Lizzie  of  tin  mounted 
he  and  did  heave  a  line  of  great  weight  to  the 
maidens. 

7.  But  the  time  of  his  return  was  ai  hand; 
wherefore  Jerekuk  did  rend  his  hair  and 
gnash  his  teeth,  for  he  had  fallen  for  a  fair 
eater-of-beans. 

8.  And  when  he  retumeth  the  snow  lay 
upon  the  ground  in  great  numbers,  whereat 
Jerukek  did  remain  much  in  his  dwelling-place 
and  smoketh  the  "Toastie"  and  rolleth  the 
bones. 

9.  But  he  did  betake  himself  daily  unto 
the  house  of  torture  and  did  pull  mightily  at 
the  chest  weights  and  swang  the  clubs  so  that 
he  did  crack  himself  oft  upon  the  gonk. 

10.  And  il  came  to  pass  that  the  second 
month  and  the  twenty-second  day  of  the 
month  approached. 


11.  Wherefore  Jerekuk  did  summon  unto 
him  the  fair  eater-of-beans,  but  she  refused 
his  invite. 

12.  And  then  did  Jerekuk  call  mightily 
upon  the  name  of  his  gods  and  sware  a  great 
oath  unto  himself. 

13.  But  at  length  he  did  summon  his 
cousin,  whom  he  had  not  seen  for  many  years, 
even  from  childhood,  but  who  had  great 
repute  for  her  beauteous  countenance;  and 
was  most  acceptable  to  his  family. 

14.  Nor  did  she  refuse  Jerekuk. 

15.  But  on  the  appointed  day  she  arrived, 
and  her  face  did  resemble  the  apple  pie,  yea, 
and  her  mouth  the  entrance  into  the  subway. 

16.  And  yet  again  did  Jerekuk  rend  his 
hair,  for  he  had  become  an  object  to  be 
avoided  among  his  fellow-men. 

17.  But  in  their  hearts  did  they  pity 
Jerekuk, although  they  shunned  him  upon  the 
highway. 

18.  And  Jerekuk  danced  with  his  cousin 
for  twenty  dances,  yea,  and  four  extras. 

19.  And  the  world  was  an  object  of  hatred 
in  his  sight . 

20.  And  it  came. to  pass  that  as  the  end 
of  that  term  drew  nigh,  exams,  were  handed 
unto  Jerekuk,  and  lie  marveled  much  but 
wrote  little,  for  in  the  words  of  the  prophet, 
much  is  asked  but  little  is  answered. 

2 1 .  And  to  each  exam .  was  its  mark . 

22.  And  when  his  marks  were  manifested 
unto  Jerekuk  he  did  quake  with  terror,  remem- 
bering the  paddle  of  his  father. 


CHAPTIOK    in 

1.  Jerekuk  waxeth  careless.  The  scribes 
and  elders  debate  concerning  him,  17  and  he 
departeth  from  that  land. 

1.  Now  it  came  to  pass  that  in  the  third 
lap,  Jerekuk  did  wax  careless,  for  the  voice  of 
the  spring  called  unto  him  and  he  did  answer. 

2.  And  Jerekuk  did  those  things  which 
were  evil  in  the  sight  of  the  scribes  and  elders 
of  the  people. 

3.  And  he  cutted  classes  and  chapel 
insolently  and  did  read  Snappy  Stories  and 
chew  gum  even  in  the  tabernacle. 


292 


4.  And  Jerckuk  left  undone  those  things 
which  he  ought  to  have  done  and  did  those 
things  which  he  ought  not  to  have  done,  and 
there  was  no  health  in  him. 

5.  And  it  came  to  pass  that  the  "  daylight 
saving"  did  affect  the  learning  of  Jerekuk 
mightily —  and  he  flank  his  lessons. 

6.  And  he  waxed  yet  more  careless  and  did 
yield  to  temptation. 

7.  For  divers  mutterings  would  eke  forth 
from  his  window. 

8.  And  now  he  would  say,  "  I  haveth  a  full 
house  "  and  anon,  "Come  O  seven,  yea, 
come  ye  also  eleven . ' ' 

9.  But  the  scribes  and  elders  did  get  on 
to  Jerekuk  and  did  learn  his  ways. 

10.  Wherefore  was  much  debating  in  the 
meeting  place  of  the  scribes  and  elders. 

11.  And  there  the  fate  of  Jerekuk  was 
decided,  and  a  grievous  fate  it  was. 

12.  And  on  the  following  day  did  Jerekuk 
receive  a  mighty  summons  in  the  mail. 

13.  And  he  went  unto  the  office  and  stood 
before  the  Presence. 

14.  And  the  Presence  looked  long  upon 
Jerekuk  and  opened  his  mouth  and  spake : 

15.  "  0  Jerekuk,  it  hath  been  found  in  the 
councils  of  the  mighty  that  thy  services  are 
no  longer  necessary  in  this  place. 

16.  Therefore,  get  thee  hence  to  another 
land,  and  if  thou  art  wanting  in  shekels  for 
the  journey,  I  even  I  will  lend  a  sum  unto 
thee." 

17.  And  Jerekuk  did  return  sadly  to  his 
dwelling  place  and  packed  his  trunk  and  gat 
him  gone. 

18.  But  his  knees  shook  beneath  him,  for 
his  old  man  could  wield  mightily  the  paddle; 
there  was  weeping  and  gnashing  of  teeth. 

19.  And  Jerekuk  was  seen  no  more  in  that 
land. 


EXONIAN  BALLOT 

Favorite  preparatory  school  next  to  Exeter  ?  *Qsyv\     <~)  &-^v\S 

Favorite  college  ?  H  A  T  /&  ^C\  ' 

Favorite  girl's  boarding  school? 

Favorite  girl's  college?'        CJ/\A^T^-^LJ^A^<Sr>\ 

Favorite  girl's  name?     TWiUi-u,     Pirv»*^W.     H-(Jlx^^, 

"  ~Bl°ncLi,  -i-^jj^^iZLL 

Favorite  type  of  girl  (as  blonde,  brunette,  etc. )  ?  -£x<. 

Have  you  ever  kissed  a  girl?  If\iotAwhy?(v^-^i  "    -^  <j^JUuO  f 
How  many  girls  do  you  correspond  with?    -f-CT    JJ*r~       l^f 

What  war  measure  do  you  favor  for  this'year's  commencement? 

Favorite  sport  to  watch?  f-/o~f~   h&v\(J 

Favorite  musical  instrument?  '     0^~^'y^-t-       a£££i~cXcKsC4 

Favorite  piece  of  music  by  which  to  dance?     oJt  ~~tX-JL    t-\^a^Jl 

Favorite  dance  ?       CW->_(.    ih_x-T^    ~7&txJU{ 

Favorite  dormitory  at  Exeter?  ^ArCCCtx-t-^j)   nr6~"~AJL  h\,  Fcfc. . 

Favorite  study?  ^-^T-^Oo/tj^v^-g 

Hardest  study?  ' — ^'-^-MCt-i^ 

Favorite  preacher  ?lf)<sir    />'/*'   ~)*^<-->*-*JXf.    A^^-O-^J^V^ 

Favorite  novel?     Zi^^  t\AMA^Xo  t-v-.    *■     &  <»-AA_*-#-*vn- 

Favorite  amusementT Wjfc b I rt ft-TV*K     ^  Kite h '*  <f    Se h/ofa  ' 

Favorite  magazine ?^$<t-//tUUr    T^Jl   Q^XiUCJLcj 

Favorite  newspaper?     /cjw/m/cJU/    'Kiytr    £cffa       " 

Favorite  actor?  jKa/ ■     Qfajy^JUyy 

Favorite  actress  ?  I^JL>Co~     ^Ax^tC-^S-^ 

Favorite  movie  actor?  Pc 

Favorite  movie  actress? 

Do  you  wear  suspenders  ? 

Do  you  use  tobacco,  and  if  so  did  you  use  it  before  entering  Exeter? 

-^i£-o,  o-^^U.  A+{*-a    J*  <yrX:-tLK(f*~f<AY 

Favorite  brand  of  cigarette?     6*-<-AC    **  »— <*  ,  '&-*■  Ck^i« 
What  position  in  school  do  you  most  admire?    s>V»vj  •  C*^  ' 

Would  you  prefer  to  own  an  "  E  "  or  a  Cum  Laude  charm? 

What  changes  woulo  you  make  if  you  were  running  the  school? 

Do  you  own  a  Liberty  Bond  or  a  War  Savings  Stamp  ?  *   S^S'wM-  _  I  ' 

If  you  were  to  enlist  what  branch  of  the  service  would  you  choose? 


293 


The  Peal's  Short  Story  Contest 


We  are  now  ready  to  announce  the  deci- 
sions of  our  judges  regarding  the  Peal's 
Short  Story  Contest.  The  contest  ended  in  a 
blaze  of  glory.  That  is  we  burnt  all  but  three 
of  the  manuscripts  submitted.  The  judges 
could  hardly  decide  which  of  these  three 
deserves  the  booby  prize.  The  first  prize  of 
twenty  thousand  dollars  is  awarded  Miss 
Helene  Babbette  La  Coste,  of  the  class  of 
1918.  The  decision  was  given  on  originality 
of  composition;  clarity  of  thought,  and 
interest  of  subject.  The  second  prize  of  a 
Rolls-Royce  runabout  is  awarded  Mr.  Regi- 
nald Vanderhoff,  ex-'21,  and  the  third  prize 
of  a  fifty-six  jewel  wrist  watch  is  given  to 
Miss  Olive  Thomas.  We  print  below  the 
winning  stories  and  feel  sure  that  our  readers 
will  concur  with  the  judges  in  recognizing 
their  extraordinary  worth. 

Trapped !     Ugh . 

Prize  Story — First  Prize 

It  was  a  bright  June  day  in  western  Russia. 
Our  story,  however  is  staged  in  the  wilds 
of  New  York  City,  in  November,  where  all 
was  raining,  snowing,  and  hailing.  Some 
weather!  A  sinister  looking  man,  muffled  in  a 
high  silk  hat,  stepped  stealthily  from  a  taxi 
in  front  of  number  23 !  23 !  23 !  Skidoo  Avenue, 
near  the  famous  Riverside  Drive.  He  paid 
the  driver  with  an  ugly  leer  and  tip  — 
toed  carefully  up  the  white-washed  marble 
steps  up  to  the  very  front  door  itself  (it  was  a 
bright  June  day  in  western  Russia.)1  Inside 
all  was  dark  and  gloomy.  The  chairs  were 
draped  with  sheets,  and  horse-blankets  cov- 
ered the  windows,  rendering  all  black  and 
impervious.  The  man  went  about  his  busi- 
ness in  a  professional  manner.  He  completely 
rifled  all  the  hidden  safes  and  came  at  last  to 
the  drawing  room .  He  was  easily  drawn  there 
by  some  mysterious  hypnotizing,  mesmeriz- 
ing influence.  It  was  indeed  the  drawing- 
room.  Here  all  the  chairs  were  draped  with 
counterpanes  and  the  windows  were  trimmed 
with  sashes,  done  in  Grseco-Roman  stripes. 


Upon  the  sofa  lay  the  sleeping  form  of  a 
sleeping  girl.  When  the  thief  saw  her  he  gave 
a  start,  and  started  to  noiselessly  remove  the 
rings  from  her  fingers,  ears,  and  nose.  As  he 
was  doing  this,  she  naturally  sneezed  and 
awoke  with  a  start.2 

"Who  are  you?"  she  cried.  "What  are  you 
doing?  Where  do  you  come  from  and  how 
do  you  do?"3 

"I  am  Archibald,  the  Apartment  Abode 
Apache,"  he  quothed,  in  a  sepulchral  tone, 
"  and  I  am  removing  your  ear-ring.  "4 

"Harold,  she  cried,"  save  me  from  this 
robber!" 

The  front  door  opened  and  Harold6  enter- 
ed. He  peered  about  in  the  gloom  and 
finally  his  eyes  hit  upon  the  object  of  his 
search.  This  floored  the  burglar,  but  never- 
theless he  closed  in  for  the  struggle,  and  with 
double  sight  and  wonderful  presence  of  mind 
he  picked  up  a  statue  of  Venus  de  Milo  and 
hurled  it  headlong  at  the  newcomer.  Harold 
fell  upon  his  box  of  candy,  which  he  was 
bringing  to  his  betrothed  with  a  sickly  grunt, 
murmuring,  "Ethel — farewell,  I  am  going  to 
the  land  of  the  midnight  sun,  where  the 
heliotropes  grow  and  the  rabbits  run,  where 
the  day  is  as  long  as  a  month  in  June,  where 
the  cuckoo-clock  sings  its  sweet,  low  tune,  and 
the  lion  lies  down  with  the  lamb.  I  am  going 
to  the  land  of  forget-me-nots,  where  all  you 
do  is  to  think  sweet  thoughts,  where  the 
rooster  lays  his  eggs  of  gold,  the  love  of  a 
maid  is  free  and  bold  and  you  just  don't  give 
a ."6 

All  this  time  the  chocolates  were  running 
with  Harold's  weight.7 

Ethel  with  a  cry  of  fear  rushed  to  Hie 
prostrate  form,  lying  prostrate  on  the  box  of 
candy. 

"You  have  killed  him,"  she  cried,  noticing 
the  deep  dent  in  his  Adam's  apple.  Then 
suddenly  espying  the  running  candy,  she 
screamed  and  fell  unconscious  upon  the 
bonbons. 

"Ha."  chuckled  the  villain,  "he-he,  o-oh, 
ugh,  ugh." 


294 


Harold  could  not  stand  this  further.  Rais- 
ing himself  with  a  mighty  effort  on  one  elbow 
he  emitted  a  shrill  whistle.  Instantly  (it  was 
a  bright  June  day  in  western  Russia)8  the 
counterpanes  fell  from  the  chairs  and  in  each 
sat  a  stalwart  member  of  the  New  York  fire 
department. 

Harold  arose  and,  gathering  Ethel  in  his 
arms,  pointed  at  the  cowering  thief. 

"You  thought  to  murder  me  in  cold  blood 
and  steal  my  Ethel,  did  you,  you  cold-blooded 
ghastly  villain,  you,  you,  you!  My  friend, 
you  may  now  see  how  you  enjoy  the  parking 
space  at  Sing  Sing.  Firemen,  do  your  duty, 
put  him  out!"  "Never  shall  Sing  Sing  see 
my  insides  or  hear  my  voice,"  said  the 
baffled  Archibald.  "I  may  be  trapped,  but 
see  how  a  villain  dies!"  And  drawing  his 
Waterman's  from  his  pocket  he  plunged  it 
into  his  left  eyebrow.  Thus  was  Archibald 
the  Apartment  Abode  Apache  expunged. 

"Fireman,  save  my  child." 

It  was  a  bright  June  day  in  western  Russia. 

Editor's  Note 

1.  Note  the  suspense  created  by  this 
masterful  parenthesis. 

2.  Notice  the  starts,  three  of  them.  Here 
the  story  takes  a  decidedly  startling  turn. 

3.  This  last  question  seems  irrelevant, 
immaterial  and  incompetent,  but  the  author 
assured  us  that  whenever  a  burglar  is  dis- 
covered holding  the  nose  of  a  pretty  girl  she 
asks  any  question  she  pleases.  We  suggested 
instead,  "Will  you  have  another  cup  of  tea?" 
but  the  author  said  that  there  were  no  cups 
in  this  house,  for  all  the  chinaware  had  been 
stored  away  for  the  winter. 

4.  He  wasn't.  It  was  her  nose  ring,  but 
the  author  refused  to  change  it.  He  said  we 
should  claim  it  to  be  a  typographical  error. 

5.  This  is  the  hero  of  the  story. 

6.  Cuss. 

7.  The  chocolates  were  Tark  and  Pil- 
ford's,  hence  this  explanation. 

8.  This  is  remarkable.  Our  author  won 
the  prize  on  this  suspense  de  Luxe 


Prize  Story — Second  Prize 
The  Great  War 

It  was  a  great  day  for  Bill  Hohenzollern 
and  his  gang  when  the  German  High-Seas 
Fleet  lay  at  anchor  in  the  Exeter  River  off 
the  rear  of  Weeks  and  Seward's.  With  this 
place  of  immense  strategical  importance  in 
their  possession,  they  felt,  and  with  some 
reason,  that  the  conquest  of  America  was  half 
completed.  However,  the  wily  Boche  had 
overlooked  one  thing.  He  had  forgotten  that 
old  P.  E.  A.  with  its  Abbot  Hall  roughnecks, 
its  Hoyt  Hall  yeggs,  its  Peabody  Hall  bums, 
and  last  and  worst  of  all  its  Dunbar  preps, 
was  firmly  entrenched  in  this  great  metropolis 
of  Rockingham  County.  Immediately  upon 
their  arrival,  the  Huns,  acting  in  accordance 
with  their  well-known  policy  of  frightfulness, 
seized  the  entire  supply  of  fudge,  Fatimas, 
and  sauerkraut,  and  closed  down  the  P.  E.  A. 
Cafe.  Moreover,  they  brutally  seized  the 
police  department  and  locked  him  and  the 
faculty  of  the  Academy  up  in  the  Fern.  Sem. 
building,  releasing  the  latter,  however,  upon 
the  earnest  appeal  of  a  deputation  of  students, 
in  order  that  classes  might  be  held  as  usual. 

Already  a  slight  feeling  of  resentment, 
caused  by  the  Hun's  lack  of  consideration, 
was  seething  in  the  breast  of  the  entire  student- 
body ;  especially  the  little  prep  cruelly  de- 
prived of  his  toys  (it  is  officially  reported  that 
20  rattles,  as  many  talking  dolls,  and  two  nurs- 
ing bottles  were  confiscated  in  Dunbar  alone) 
threatened  to  break  out  in  violent  demon- 
stration against  this  excessive  oppression. 
While  the  Senior  Council  was  attempting  to 
arrive  at  some  decisive  course  of  action,  the 


295 


preps  pulled  off  a  master  stroke  that  will  make 
their  name  immortal  among  all  our  ancestors. 
Leaving  Dunbar  at  6.22  in  order  to  avoid 
breaking  the  eight  o'clock  rule,  they  proceeded 
with  stealthy  foot  tracks  to  the  shore  of  the 
Exeter  River.    Then,  under  cover  of  darkness, 
they  boldly  waded  out  to  where  the  mighty 
fleet  lay  at  anchor,  and  in  reprisal,  tied  each 
warship  to  the  bottom  with  pieces  of  string  and 
rope.    It  was  on  the  next  day  that  the  finish 
of  the  end  came.     That  morning  at   10.30 
a.  m.  the  Imperial  German  High-Seas  Fleet 
Commander  perceived  the  ship  on  the  Acad- 
emy Tower  off  his  starboard  bow  and  headed 
his  way  full  speed.    Being  somewhat  under  the 
influence  of  a  "Bier    and    Wurst"  fest,  he 
thought  the  U.  S.  fleet  was  upon  him,  and 
with  a  mighty  "Gott   in   Himmel"  ordered 
his  men  to  fire.     Horrible  to  say  the  shells 
failing  to  reach  the  tower  fell  crashing  into 
the  Senatorial  Chamber.     The  scene  of  de- 
vastation was  awful.     Whole  panes  of  glass 
were  splintered,  the  waste  basket  was  upset 
by  a  high  explosive  shell,  and  horses  were 
torn  page  from  page.     But  this  was  the  last- 
straw !    No  true  Exonian  could  restrain  him- 
self when  that  consecrated  temple  of  study, 
dedicated  to  Vergil,  Cicero,  and  the  Red  Book, 
suffered  bombardment.     Instantly  the  Bat- 
talion fell  in  outside  the  trench  room,  marched 
to  the  armory,  and  secured  their  guns  at  the 
headquarters  of  the  Quartermaster's  Depart- 
ment.     Then,    Captain    Dion,    borrowing   a 
sword  from  Miss  Justice  of  the  Town  Hall, 
led  a  furious  charge  to  the  river,  but  finding 
the  water  wet,  the  Battalion  made  a  masterly 
strategic  retreat  in  the  best  of  order,  seized 
the  trenches  on  the  golf  course,  and  remained 
in  undisputed  possession  of  the  third  hole  for 
the  rest  of  the  war. 

But  now  the  end  came  rapidly;  the  entire 
school  armed  with  everything  from  Lucky 
Strikes  down,  lay  siege  to  the  fleet  and  started 
a  tremendous  gas  at  lack.  I  'ruler  the  com- 
bination of  bull,  ditto  Durham,  and  Sweet 
Caporals,  the  Boches  soon  succumbed,  and  in 
less  than  ten  minutes  the  last  Teutonic  toe 
was  pointing  to  the  ethereal  heavens.  It  was 
a  glorious  victory.     The  German  fleet  made 


good  material  for  the  great  bonfire  held  at  the 
bandstand.  The  TJ.  S.  government  rewarded 
the  valorous  work  of  the  students  of  Exeter 
by  pensioning  and  retiring  the  faculty: 

First  Guy. — "Jones  has  a  comb  he  would 
not  give  up  for  anything. " 

Second  Guy. — "That  so?" 

First  Guy. — "Yes,  its  teeth  are  out  and 
he  can't  part  with  it.  " 

Trig  Class 

Mr.  Francis. — "The  next  thing  will  be  to 
prove  an  identity. " 

Voice. — "He  must  think  we're  detectives." 

English    Teacher. — "What    would    you 
call  a  man  who  pretends  to  know  everything?" 
Boy. — "A  professor." 

English  Prof. — "Will  you  gentlemen 
please  take  your  seats?    You  too,  Martin.  " 

Student  at  Exeter,  in  dire  need  of  $25.00, 
wrote  to  his  uncle  as  follows: 

Deai-  Uncle. — If  you  could  see  how  I  blush 
for  shame  while  I'm  writing  this,  you  would 
pity  me.  Do  you  know  why?  Because  I 
have  to  ask  you  for  a  few  dollars  and  don't 
know  how  to  express  myself.  It  is  impossible 
for  me  to  tell  you.  I  prefer  to  die.  I  send  you 
this  by  messenger  who  will  wait  for  answer. 
Believe  me,  dearest  uncle, 

Your  most  obedient  and  affectionate 

Nephew. 

P.  S. — Overcome  with  shame  for  what  I 
have  written,  I  have  been  running  after  the 
messenger  in  order  to  take  the  letter  from 
him,  but  I  cannot  catch  him.  Heaven  grant 
that  something  may  happen  to  stop  him  or 
that  this  letter  may  get  lost! 

The  uncle  was  naturally  touched,  but  was 
equal  to  the  emergency.  He  replied  as  fol- 
lows: 

My  dear  Nephew. — Console  yourself   and 
blush  no  more.     Providence  has  heard  your 
prayer.    The  messenger  lost  the  letter. 
Your  affectionate 

Uncle. 


296 


GETTING  HIS  E 

Flunk!     Flunk!     Flunk! 

In  that  last  exam.,  O  Gee! 
And  I  would  that  I  could  use  the  by-words 

To  express  my  thoughts  unto  thee. 

But  those  questions  made  me  dizzy 
And  pierced  my  brain  like  shot, 

But  oh,  for  the  thought  of  a  D  that's  earned 
Or  the  sight  of  a  grade  that's  not. 

Flunk!     Flunk!     Flunk! 

At  the  end  of  my  string,  O  me. 
For  the  pleasant  thought  of  a  passing  grade 

Is  ever  denied  to  me. 

Nobody  knows  where  the  money  goes 
Nobody  knows,  nobody  knows. 
Coats  and  pants, 
Pumps  for  a  dance, 
Spiffy  new  shirts, 
To  charm  the  flirts, 
A  swell  straw  hat, 
A  sporty  cravat, 
Some  socks,  some  studs, 
All  kinds  of  duds. 

But  nobody  knows  where  the  money  goes 
Nobody  knows  that  it  goes  for  clothes 
Nobody  knows,  oh,  nobody  knows, 
But  father. 

Lower. — "I  thought  you  took  geometry 
last  year." 

Upper. — -"I  did,  but  the  faculty  encored 
me." 


Why  Worry? 

Things  are  not  always  as  dark  as  they  seem 

to  the  student, 
For  this  is  the  way  he  reasons : 
You  either  flunk  or  you  don't  flunk; 
If  you  don'tflunk,there'snocauseforworry. — 
If  you  do  flunk,  you  either  go  on  senate  or 

you  don't  go  on  senate; 
If  you  don't  go  on  senate, there's  no  cause  for 

worry — 
If  you  go  on  senate,  you  either  get  off  or  you 

stay  on; 
If  you  get  off,  there's  no  cause  for  worry — 
If  you  stay  on  senate,  you  either  get  on  pro- 
bation or  you  don't  get  on  probation; 
If  you  don't  get  on  probation,  there's  no  cause 

for  worry — 
If  you  do  get  on  probation,  you  are  either 

fired  or  you  are  not  fired ; 
If   you   are   not   fired,  there's  no   cause   for 

worry — 
But  if  you  are  fired,  there  isn't  anything  left 

to  worry  about, 
So  what's  the  use. 


Bored  of  Education  Exams. 

Latin 
Time  allowed:  seven  and  one-half  hours. 

1.  Give  three  reasons  why  fellows  using 
"trots"  pass  Latin,  when  fellows  who  don't 
get"E's." 

2.  Why  was  Homer  the  greatest  Latin 
poet? 

3.  Translate  into  English:  "Ad  Haxles 
cum  studiis." 

4.  Translate  into  Latin :  "Yankee  Doodle 
passed  his  Latin  riding  on  a  pony. " 

English 
Time  allowed:  thirty  seconds. 

1.  Discuss  at  length  the  styles  of  Robert 
Chambers  and  Governeur  Morris. 

2.  In  what  respects  is  Snappy  Stories 
superior  to  the  Parisienne? 

3.  Who  wrote  Dante's  "  Inferno?  " 


297 


4.     Punctuate:     If  a  wood  chuck  would 
.  chuck   all   the   wood   he   would   chuck   how 
much  wood  would  a  wood  chuck  chuck  if  a 
wood  chuck  would  chuck  wood. 

Ancient  History 
Time  allowed :  fifty  years. 

1 .  What  great  battle  was  fought,  Novem- 
ber 17,  1917;  and  who  kicked  the  winning 
goal? 

2.  Give  within  ten  years  the  date  of  the 
origin  of  (1)  Alumni  biscuits.  (2)  Faculty- 
jokes. 

3.  Discuss  at  length  the  adventures  of 
K.  Model  Africanus  Maior  before  he  took  up 
tailoring  for  the  Academy. 

4.  Locate  on  map  131313  and  tell  why 
important  (1)  I.  0.  K.  A.  Theatre  (2)  P.  E.  A. 
senate  (3)  Mr.  Ford's  office. 

Physics 

Time    allowed:      The    usual    time:      three 
minutes,  twenty-six  and  two-fifths  seconds 

1.  A  machine  gun  bullet  with  a  velocity 
of  3,500  feet  per  second  takes  17  seconds  to 
bore  through  an  Alumni  steak.  If  the  steak 
is  one-half  inch  thick,  find  its  density. 

2.  How  much  kinetic  energy  per  square 
inch  will  be  required  to  swallow  the  steak  of 
example  one.  If  the  steak  is  six  and  one-half 
per  cent,  digestible,  what  will  be  the  amount 
of  useful  work  done  in  chewing  it? 

3.  How  much  potential  energy  is  required 
to  become  a  member  of  Senate?  Show  how 
this  danger  can  be  averted  by  means  of  a 
pull(ey). 

4.  If  a  rough  house  is  going  on  in  a  room 
on  the  top  floor  of  Abbot,  and  a  Prof.,  with  a 
stride  of  13  feet,  1  inch,  living  on  the  second 
floor  arrives  on  the  scene  in  four  seconds, 
compute  the  velocity  of  sound. 

Latin  as  it  Looks 

Ceesar  sic  dicat  unde  cur  eggessit  lictam. 
Ca?sar  sicked  de  cat  on  de  cur.     I  guess  it 
licked  him. 


Ohse! 

A    NAMELESS    STOEY 

One  Day,  a  Carpenter  living  near  the  Hudson 
decided  to  go  fishing.  Before  starting,  he 
went  to  buy  some  Brown  bread  at  the  Baker's 
where  he  was  followed  around  by  a  Savage 
Kerr  with  Cole-Black  Head;  but  he  gave 
Chase  and  the  Curran.  It  soon  proved  itself 
a  Strong  Barker,  but  a  Stone  thrown  by  a 
Taylor  followed  by  a  Rockwell  placed  by  a 
Butler  quickly  deprived  it  of  its  vocal 
Powers,  although  it  got  off  Scott  free.  The 
Fisher  was  a  Swift  Walker,  and  he  soon  arrived 
at  a  deep  Poole  in  a  Pond  near  a  Glenn. 
Although  his  rod  and  Reel  were  covered  with 
Rust,  he  caught  a  Pike  while  fishing  from 
the  Shaw.  With  his  Hand,  he  carried  the 
fish  by  a  Gill,  till  he  had  found  a  Sack  in 
which  to  carry  it.  Failing  to  catch  more,  he 
started  to  Cheiv  on  his  Broumbread,  Rice,  and 
Black  Berry  which  his  Cook  had  prepared, 
and  then  he  began  to  Fry  the  fish.  While 
smoking  a  com-Cobb  pipe,  he  met  a  Hunter 
who  had  shot  some  Teel  in  some  Reed's 
nearby.  The  Day,  which  had  been  very 
Clement  so  far,  was  becoming  Lourie  with 
prospects  of  a  Storm.  The  Fisher  Hurd 
thunder  and  the  sky  was  getting  Black,  so  he 
climbed  to  the  top  of  some  Knowl.es  to  look 
for  a  Lane  by  which  to  walk  home.  In  the 
distance,  he  sa,w  a  Shepherd  with  a  Lamb, 
and  was  directed  by  him.  While  passing 
through  a  Hay  Field,  he  was  frightened  by 
the  Bellows  of  a  Hidden  bull,  but  he  Cooley 
kept  his  Head  and  finally  reached  the  Camp 
of  a  small  summer  Colony,  on  the  Wright.  A 
Burleigh  Gardener  with  a  Stern  face  was 
trimming  Hedges  by  some  Gates,  but  he  could 
only  speak  French.  An  American  Officer 
just  back  from  Holland,  however,  told  the 
Fisher  Howe  to  proceed.  As  the  latter  was 
Hale  and  Hardy,  he  succeeded  in  reaching  his 
friends'  Holmes  before  Knight. 

McClenahan  in  Soule 

"If  it's  heads,  we  go  to  bed.  If  it's  tails,  we 
stay  up,  and"  nervously,  "if  it  stands  on 
edge  we  study. " 


298 


Published  Daily 

at  Tea  Time 

This  issue  8  pages 


Cfje  <£xomenne 


Price  lc  per  copy 
4  for  5  cents 
$1.49  per  year 


NOVEMBER  23,  2018 


0  U  I 


W  I  N 


0  U  I 


Heroines  of  Carmine  and  Silver  triumph  over  Lavender  ivariettes- 

uiitness  Breathless   Contest 


-Crouid  of  10,000 


This  afternoon  at  fourteen  o'clock 
before  a  dense  crowd  of  10,000  people 
Exeter's  beautiful  quartette  overwhelmed 
the  fair  ones  of  Andover  in  one  of  the  most 
exciting  croquet  matches  ever  performed 
on  Mr.  Plimpton's  playground,  by  the 
score  of  3  to  i.  The  playing  on  the  whole 
was  terrifically  fast  and  exciting,  being 
marred  by  very  few  instances  of  hair- 
pulling  and  unladylike  language  The 
feature  of  the  game  was  Captain  Lucillia's 
remarkable  shot  through  both  wickets 
from  the  25-incb  line,  thus  clenching  the 
championship  knitting-bag  for  Exeter. 
Captain  Lucillia  did  by  far  the  best  work 
for  Exeter,  but  was  ably  seconded  by 
Miss  Judith  C.  Sturm.  For  Andover, 
Mademoiselle  Cecile,  the  champion  of 
Paris,  did  some  exceedingly  courageous 
playing,  actually  hitting  Captain  Lucil- 
lia's ball  once.  The  work  of  Exeter's 
quartette  showed  plainly  the  results  of 
the  unceasing  efforts  of  Coaches  May- 
nard  and  Stillman  and  Trainer  Irwin. 


THE  CONTEST 

Since  both  sides  agreed  that  it  would  be 
very  immoral  to  spin  a  coin,  Exeter  ceded 
first  play  to  Andover.  Captain  Cecile 
went  through  for  two  wickets,  but  was 
caught  there  by  Captain  Lucillia  and 
roqueted  to  the  10-centimetre  line.  Cap- 
tain Lucillia  pushed  through  two  more 
wickets,  failing  to  make  third.  Miss 
Carrie  Bailey  (A.)  then  plunged  through 
for  one  wicket,  but  was  caught  by  Miss 
Judith  Sturm  (E.)  Captain  Lucillia  then 
reeled  off  three  more  wickets  and  made 
her  famous  shot  to  the  stake.  Judith  tore 
through  left  wicket  and  reached  the  final 
wicket.  The  half  ended  with  her  ball 
on  the  two-inch  line. 

SECOND    HALF 

After  being  served  with  tea  and  cigar- 
ettes, the  teams  repaired  to  the  lawn. 


Exeter  struck  first,  Judith  hitting  the 
stake.  Miss  Delicia  B  Lourie  then  lead 
off  for  the  second  couple,  making  a  gain 
of  two  wickets.  Miss  Marion  Boltwood 
followed  for  Andover,  failing  to  make 
second  wicket.  Next  came  Miss  Hen- 
rietta T.  Torkelson.  flashing  through 
four  wickets  in  ro  flat.  Miss  Jackie 
Dwyer,  of  Andover,  followed,  beating 
Henrietta  by  1-10  of  an  inch.  Delicia  then 
advanced  the  ball  by  a  series  of  straight 
hits  to  the  2-10  inch  line,  there  putting  it 
over  for  a  successful  hit.  The  game  ended 
with  Jackie  victorious  over  Henrietta. 

SUMMARIZING       DESCRIPTION — ARRAY        OF 
CONTESTANTS 

Captain  Lucillia  vs.  Captain  Cecile. 
Miss  Judith  C.  Sturm  vs.  Miss  Carrie 
Bailey. 


Miss  Lucillia,  Captain 
2019  Track  Team 

and 
2018  Croquet  Team 


Miss  Delicia  B.  Lourie  vs.  Miss  Marion 
Boltwood. 

Miss  Henrietta  T.  Torkelson  vs.  Miss 
Jackie  Dwyer. 

Score — 3-r.  Time — 3  hours.  Penal- 
ties— Miss  Cecile,  10  inches,  hair-pulling. 

Miss  Lourie,  5  inches,  saying  "D n. " 

Umpiress — Miss  Pearson.     Referee — Rev. 
G.  H.  Love. 

After  the  victory  Captain  Lucillia  was 
kissed  by  all  the  Andover  women  and 
nearly  overcome  by  the  caresses  of  the 
student  body.  Tea  was  served  to  cele- 
brate the  contest.  "E."  hair-bands  were 
presented  to  the  victorious  team. 


THEATER    REVIEW    AND    ENTER- 
TAINMENT THROUGHOUT 
THE  CITY 

NEW    IOftA — HIGH    CLASS    VAUDEVILLE 


The  programme  at  the  Ioka  this  week 
is  one  of  unusual  excellence,  featuring  a 
great  number  of  celebrated  artists.  Mile. 
Millaire  in  her  "Midnight-moonlight"  is 
especially  pleasing,  as  ;s  Hyer  D.  Ressis 
in  her  scenic  playlet,  "The  World's  in 
Love." 

EXETER   OPERA   HOUSE— GRAND   OPERA 
EXCLUSIVELY 

The  Worcester  Opera  Company  pro- 
vides a  programme  of  sterling  quality 
for  next  week.  We  publish  the  entire 
programme. 

Monday. — Malstother  in  "Wilhelm"  and 
Gladii  in  "Faust."  "Faust"  is  sung 
to  bring  back  the  music  of  "Wil- 
helm's"  time.  The  opera  is,  of 
course,  expurgated  in  its  rendition. 
Tuesday. — deLant  and  Smith  in  "Sparks 
of  the  Air  " 


299 


THE  EXONIENNE 

Published  every  day  except  Sunday  at 
tea-time.  Special  editions  at  seventeen 
o'clock  after  faculty  meetings.  Entered 
at  the  post  office  at  West  Hoboken  N.  J., 
as  third  class  matter. 

Subscripton  fifty  cents  per  year, 
twenty-five  cents  per  term,  payable 
strictly  in  advance  or  otherwise.  Single 
copies  given  away.  The  Exonienne  will 
be  devoted  to  matters  of  interest  to  the 
female  students  of  the  Academy  and 
alumni  and  alumnae.  All  matters  of  pub- 
lication from  males  must  be  accompanied 
by  the  full  name  and  address  of  the  father, 
mother  and  third  cousins  of  the  writer  in 
addition  to  his  photograph  and  auto- 
graph. 

Copies  on  sale  at  J.  H.  Batchelder's 
Book  Store  also  at  news  stands,  hotels, 
cafes  and  Kiosks,  in  Paris,  London, 
Petrograd,  New  York,  Boston,  Exeter 
and  Cairo  and  Powow  River  Junction. 
All  communications  should  be  addressed 
to  The  Exonienne,  Exeter,  N.  H. 


EDITORS 

Delxa  Catessen  Hallie    Butt 

Mark  Twain  O.  Henry 

Oh!    Johnny 


EDITORIALS 

"Ladies,  gentlemen  and  others:  Why 
must  we  suffer  thus?  Why  must  our  in- 
tellects, spirits,  and  bank-rolls  decrease 
thus  under  our  very  eyes.  The  Phillips 
Exeter  Academy  Monthly  for  this  month 
is  a  crime  not  only  against  us,  against  our 
great  and  glorious  Academy,  against  our 
great  country,  but  also  against  civiliza- 
tion itself.  We  pay  for  this  useless 
periodical  the  exorbitant  price  of  twenty- 
five  cents  a  year  and  what  do  we  get? 
Editors,  do  not  your  consciences  trouble 
you,  do  you  not  blush  for  your  shame  at 
giving  us  only  53  illustrations  in  the  last 
number  and  of  these  only  16  in  colour. 
How  can  we  subsist  for  an  entire  month 
on  merely  120  articles  and  15  editorials? 
We,  in  the  name  of  the  school,  of  the 
country  and  of  humanity,  protest  against 
this  outrage  and  assure  you  that,  if  a 
radical  change  for  the  better  does  not  take 
place  in  the  immediate  future,  the  matter 
will  be  taken  up  by  the  proper  authorities 
and  new  editors  will  be  instituted  to  carry 
on  your  work.    Absolutely  I 


GOLDEN  BRANCH  BI-CENTENNIAL 

Last  night  500  members  crowded  the 
Golden  Branch  room  in  the  Merrill  Hall 
to  celebrate  the  200th  anniversary  of  the 
society.  Amelia  Adams,  the  president, 
opened  the  meeting,  by  giving  a  brief 
history  of  the  society  between  the  years 
of  igi8  and  2018.  She  commented  par- 
ticularly upon  the  fact  that  women  had 
not  been  permitted  to  become  members 
of  the  society  until  ig76.  The  officers  for 
the  winter  term  were  announced  as  fol- 
lows: President,  Amelia  Adams;  vice- 
president,  Georgianna  Plimpton;  sec- 
retary, Jessica  Sack;  treasurer,  Cecille 
Cole;  librarian,  Spencer  Weldon. 

The  meeting  opened  with  an  essay  by 
Wisteria  Vieth,  entitled  "Should  the 
League  of  Nations  maintain  a  standing 
army  of  more  than  25,000?" 

The  debate  of  the  evening  followed,  the 
question  being  "Should  men  be  per- 
mitted on  the  Senior  Council? "  For  the 
affirmative,  Alexander  Howland  and 
William  Slocum  maintained  that  men 
should  have  equal  rights  with  women. 
For  the  negative,  Miss  Rebekah  Gutwillig 
and  Miss  Eleanor  Hoagland  claimed  that 
men  were  not  able  to  run  the  affairs  of 
the  school  capably,  as  demonstrated 
by  the  grandfathers  when  they  were  at 
P.  E.  A.  The  negative  won  on  the  merits 
of  the  question  by  a  vote  of  432  to  68. 
(Continued  on  page  5) 


FACULTY  NOTICE 

Only  three  memory  tablets  instead  of 
five  are  required  for  the  memorizing  of 
the  hundred  pages  of  Vergil  assigned  for 
to-morrow  morning.  Mix  these  with 
one  drop  of  mindic  acid. 


BARGAIN  OF  BOOKS 

THE    CENTENNIAL   PICTORIAL   RECORD 

The  centennial  pictorial  record  of  the 
war  of  one  hundred  years  ago  can  be  ob- 
tained at  the  rate  of  two  cents  per  volume 
at  Spaulding's  Department  Store.  The 
set  is  1. 000  volumes,  containing  about 
25  million  pictures.  The  price  is  reason- 
able for  the  time  of  the  year. 

Another  set,  the  famous  "Fall  and 
Decline  of  the  German  Empire,"  written 
75  years  ago  in  old  English,  is  also  for 
sale.  Ten  cents  per  volume.  (347 
volumes). 


ATHLETIC      ASSOCIATION      NOTE 

At  a  meeting  of  the  Athletic  Associa- 
tion last  evening  it  was  voted  to  award 
the  members  of  the  victorious  croquet  team 
gold  hatpins  with  the  insignia  of  the  team 
"E"  with  crossed  croquet  mallets. 


COSMOPOLITAN  NEWS 
Washington  A  via  L.  R.  62 

PRESIDENT    DECLARES     INVISIBLE     COMBAT 
SYSTEM   A   SUCCESS 

Over  the  deponil  to-day  President 
Jones  declared  that  the  Invisible  system 
had  been  tried  out  and  proved  to  be  an 
unqualified  success.  Mr.  Sparks,  he  said, 
was  to  be  congratulated  upon  his  invention 
of  the  Invisible  Combat  System  as  the 
most  perfect  means  of  protecting  aerial 
posts  yet  known. 

(Continued  on  Page  8) 

INTERESTING  DISCOVERIES  MADE 

ABOUT  EXTINCT  GERMAN 

NATION 

N.  Philadelphia  via  H.  I.  20 

MUCH     PREVIOUS     INFORMATION  DECLARED 
TO   BE  FALSE 

In  court  connection  to-day  interesting 
discoveries  were  brought  to  light  concern- 
ing the  old-time  nation  of  Germania.  It 
was  stated  by  J.  H.  Clavin,  contrary  to 
the  accepted  belief,  that  the  Germans 
(Continued  on  Page  7) 


MRS.  REAMER  MURDERED 

New  Hammer  via  J .  P.  12 

WORK   OF   VIVISECTION   UNCOMPLETED 

Dr.  Randall  brought  Mrs.  K.  B.  Reamer 
back  to  life  this  afternoon  after  her  murder 
at   the   hands   of   an   unknown.     As  the 
(Continued  on  Page  4) 


SCHOOL  NOTE 

Last  Saturday  afternoon  the  Exeter 
football  team  defeated  Andover  in  the 
annual  game.  The  playing  was  as  a  whole 
very  gentlemanly,  but  R.  E.  Luman,  4th, 
was  put  out  of  the  game  for  not  asking  per- 
mission to  tackle  the  Andover  quarter- 
back and  refusing  to  beg  the  referee's 
pardon  for  such  a  breach  of  etiquette. 
The  score  was  7  to  o. 


300 


Why  We  Do  Not  Put  Initials  on  Our 
Suit  Cases 

Walter  Everett  Doe. 
Henry  Adelbert  White 
S.  A.  Dion 

Hugh  O'Neale  Clement 
Leland  Ornell  Ludwig 
Frederick  Emerson  Wright 
Phisit  Arthachinta 
Harry  Edward  Rice 
Berkeley  Ay  mar  Cater 
Henry  Otis  Chapman 
Charles  Edward  Graves 
Archie  Samuel  Holmes 
Irving  Knickerbocker 
Theodore  Otto  Petersen 
George  Albert  Sweet 
Shores  Adelbert  Walker 
Harold  Edson  Kingsbury 
Melville  Arthur  Rud  Krogness 
Albert  Dixon  Staples 
■Sydney  Octavius  Chase 
Clarence  Azel  Palmer 
George  Ownes  Pond 


X^t>i^h2/Lc7  \Jcru^uji 


Many  of  our  readers  will  remember  the 
excitement  created  in  the  midst  of  the  winter 
term,  by  the  lecture  on  Spookism  delivered  by 
the  President  of  the  Retired  Actors  Associa- 
tion. Feeling  that  our  subscribers  might 
desire  to  learn  the  future  of  the  distinguished 
President  of  Exeter's  most  famous  class,  we 
sent  his  signature  to  the  lecturer  and,  at  great 
expense,  received  the  following  communica- 
tion. 

"By  the  rising  inflection  on  the  final  letter 
of  the  first  word  it  is  undesirably  shown  that 
the  writer  is  built  along  the  general  lines  of 


Apollo  Belvedere.  I  am  informed  by  the  dot 
above  the  letter  "i"  that  the  writer  is  of 
oriental  extraction  and  probably  lives  in 
South  America  or  Australia.  I  should  place 
the  exact  location  as  Peru,  111.  The  circular 
shape  of  the  first  "o"  shows  me  clearly  that 
Mr.  Lourie  is  extremely  clever  in  the  game  of 
football  and  is  able  to  display  great  ability 
in  making  goals  from  the  field  when  the  occa- 
sion demands.  I  predict  for  his  future  that 
he  enters  Princeton  University  in  the  near 
fut  lire,  marries  within  12  years  and  lives  in  the 
United  States  during  the  greater  part  of  his 
life." 


Baseball  Coach. — "Suppose  you  are 
playing  right  field,  and  the  batter  knocks 
out  a  long  foul  in  your  territory,  what  would 
you  do?" 

Cobb. — "I  would  not  be  responsible,  as 
the  catcher  catches  all  fouls." 

Kerr,  '18  (seeing  a  girl  riding  on  mail 
wagon). — "What's  a  female  doing  on  a  male 
wagon?" 


-WlCITFinY      BUI-LETl*. 


S"n4*y  Q  I 


-S 


S°me.b<idy  is   a-lusa-ys  "hiKiTj    th*     Joy 

out    of  L  ife  / 


301 


There's  a  Spanish  professor  who  greatly 
Tears  round  in  an  auto  now  lately 

He  acts  like  a  "lord" 

Tho  it's  only  a  "Ford" 
As  large  as  a  tub  and  as  stately. 


LEAF  FROM  A  PHYSICS  NOTE  BuuK 

P.  E.  A.  Ethnology 

senior  by  his  serious 


Now-a-days  at  the  P.  E.  A. 

"Mac,  where  is  the  meat  in  this  sandwich?' 
"You're  coming  to  it,  Johnson." 
Investigation.     "I  can't  see  it,  Mac." 
"Then  you  must  have  passed  it. " 


You  can  always  tell 

frown, 
You  can  always  tell  an  "Upper"  by  his  walk 

about  the  town, 
You  can  always  tell  a  "Lower"  by  his  ties 

and  such: 
You   can   always   tell   a   "Prep," — but   you 

can't  tell  him  much. 

R.  B.,  '20  (Adapted). 


302 


.. 
The  Fusser's  Club 

OFFICERS 

President    .    .    .  ■ A.  A.  Shepard,  '19 

Vice-President J.  "W.  Laird,  '19 

Secretary J.  W.  Poole,  Jr.,  '19 

Treasurer J.  D.  Mitchell,  '18 

Librarian H.  B.  Frost,  '18 

MEMBERS 
1.918 
J.  H.  Barwise,  Jr.       S.  B.  Damon  Crawford  Johnson      D.  B.  Lourie 

E.  C.  Bonnell  C.  W.  DeVito  R.  G.  Johnson  G.  H.  Love 

E.  H.  Bowen  T.  S.  Edmonds  A.  C.  Kalbfleish,  Jr.  J.  M.  McClenahan 

E.  C.  Clarke  Frank  Garside  P.  G.  Kimball  W.  M.  Pond 

C.  C.  Cole  C.  H.  Huddleston       A.  P.  Lang  G.  W.  Roche 
Horatio  Colony,  2d    A.  L.  Hurst                  J.  K.  Lenahan              Leonard  Wheeler,  Jr. 

1919 

Joseph  Andrews,  Jr.  J.  H.  Chase  W.  C.  Fowler  J.  R.  Meehan 

W.  C.  Bennett  N.  H.  Cotton  C.  G.  Gates  A.  H.  C.  Ohse 

J.  H.  Bice  John  Dexter  C.  H.  Hawes  H.  H.  Reed 

B.  A.  Cater  J.  R.  Draper  A.  L.  Hobson,  Jr.  W.  F.  Thayer 

H.  O.  Chapman,  Jr.     B.  C  Durfee  L.  L.  Hurd  Stkphen  Webster 

1920 

D.  G.  Bonner  F.  G.  Cleveland  P.  W.  Goodell  R.  J.  Luman 
G.  W.  Bowers               D.  R.  Colton               E.  W.  Gtjion                 R.  E.  Lyford 

R.  P.  Bullard  Leon  Falk,  .lit.  H.  L.  Hilgartner        D.  H.  McConnell,  Jr. 

R.  H.  Burke  D.  P.  Geddes  J.  M.  Kimball  D.  I.  R.  P.  Morrissey 

B.  P.  Burleigh  J.  L.  Gobey  Corliss  Lamon.t.  A.  A.  Phinney 

1921 
J.  G.  Bean  S.  O.  Chase,  Jr.  R.  P.  McCaw  George  Sherrill,  Jit. 

B.  D.  Bennett  R.  M.  Deane  C.  A.  Palmer  H.  L.  Spooner 

A.  E.  Burgess  Buckley  Hubbard       J.  H.  Pratt,  Jr.  L.  R.  Stoddard 

The  Peal  regrets  that  it  was  impossible  to  have  a  picture  taken  of  this  club.     Everybody 
tried  to  get  in  and  broke  up  the  attempt. 


303: 


Expunged  Clubs 


Oic$cs3cu^ms 

soil  bctunben  bass 

tfotk,  city  Hwstr     cm 

cntlict)cs  witolifb  bes 

©cutscljcn  Vcreins  xst 

cl,cr.      /°h     W    Gotf- 


KILLED  BY  THE  KAISER 


KILLED  BY  THE  FRENCH   DEPARTMENT 
(For  its  own  good.    To  be  resurrected  next  year  as  a  literary  and  not  an  ultra-social 

organization.) 


'Tell  me  not  in  mournful  numbers, 

Life  is  but  an  empty  dream, 
When  you  wake  from  peaceful  slumbers, 

And  curse  those  pickles  and  ice  cream. 
— Exchange. 


You  and  Me  Too,  Al 

Break!     Break!     Break! 

On  thy  cold  grey  sands,  O  sea! 

But  you  won't  be  nearly  so  sadly  broke 

As  vacation  days  broke  me. 


304 


Editorials 

Scowl 

The  time  has  come  when  we  feel  it  our  duty 
to  call  the  attention  of  our  readers  to  a  some- 
thing in  the  school  which  is  so  deep-rooted 
and  so  dangerous  in  its  consequences  that  we 
consider  it  no  longer  to  be  borne,  namely  the 
vulgar  laughter  heard  at  any  time  (when,  of 
course,  there  is  anything  to  laugh  at)  in  the 
various  collecting  places  of  the  school.  This 
spirit  of  mirth  is  of  so  awful  a  nature  that 
we  think  the  fellows  will  lose  no  time  in 
crushing  it,  when  they  realize  the  dire  results 
and  consequences  of  its  retention.  This 
number  of  the  "Peal,"  the  initial  and  there- 
fore, most  sacred  number  of  the  promising 
paper,  has  been  devoted  because  of  the  con- 
dition in  our  midst  to  the  purpose  of  imbuing 
in  all  students  such  a  spirit  of  gloom  and 
depression  as  will  more  than  counteract  the 
effect  of  the  awful  laughing  heretofore.  For 
the  sake  of  your  school  SCOWL!   !   ! 

Is  or   Is    Not    Obligatory    Smoking     an 
Advantage  to  the  School? 

Yes. 

The  Peal's  Pean 

Realizing  as  everyone  does  the  absolute 
unfitness  of  the  whole  Pean  board  to  turn  out 
a  respectable  Pean,  and  knowing,  further- 
more, that  the  editor-in-chief  has  devoted  all 
of  his  time  to  pleasure  and  has  not  endeavored 
to  improve  or  alter  the  Pean  at  all,  the  "  Peal" 
has  decided  to  issue  a  special  supplement  in 
this  issue  to  make  up  for  the  loss  the  school 
has  suffered.  The  following  pages  constitute 
a  feature  which  we  would  never  have  under- 
taken had  we  not  felt  it  to  be  our  bounden 
duty.  We  hope  our  efforts  will  be  appreciated 
and  our  subscription  list  rise  accordingly. 


Very  Informing  Speech 

Eaton. — "Major  Boyer  isn't  here  yet,  but 
he  will  be  here  as  soon  as  he  gets  here.  ' 


The  Peal's  Pean 

CONTENTS 

Dedication      307 

In  Memorabilious 307 

New  Exeter,  The  Scene  of  Labor  .    .    .  308 

New  Exeter — Snew  Exeter 309 

New  Exeter— Libby  Path 310 

Calendar 311-325 

Commencement  Week,  June,  1917     .    .  313 

Washington's  Birthday,  1918      ....  321 

Faculty ■  327 

They  Also  Serve 329 

Mugographies 331 

Organizations 333 

Closer  Organizations 335 

Modern  Warfare 337 

Field  Tactics      339 

Inspection  and  Parade 341 

Guard  Duty  and  Miscellaneous      .    .      343-5 

Football,  Preliminary  Season      ....  347 

Andover  Football  Game 349 

Track 351 

Baseball      353 

Crew 355 

Andover  Hockey  Game ,  .  357 

Winter  Sports 359 

Minor  Sports 361 

Peal's  Pean's  Peal 363-500 

Academy  Fussing  Team 501 

Academy  Tiddledewinks  Team       .    .    .  502 

Bolsheviki  Association 503-8 

Bar  Association 510 

Cum  Lourie  Society      514 

Firing  Squad 516 

Fifteen  Year  Club 517 

Gloom  Club 519 

Hookey  Team 521 

SPECIAL  articles 

The  Art  of  Osculation,  by  G.  H   L.   .    .  523 
How  to  Trot    (and   get   away   with  it) 

by  C.  C.  C 524 

The   Beauties   of   Exeter    and    How    to 

Know  Them,  by  R.  P.  Bullard  .    .    .  525 
Reflections  of  a  Senator,   by  Fitch  H. 

Rowley,  3d      526 

Love  and  Its  Joys,  by  P.  W.  Goodell     527-8 
The  Science  of  Studying  in  Chapel,  by 

H.  H.  Reed 529 


305 


ANOTHER  "  PEALER" 


Anarchy  and  Its  Advantages,  by  W.  M. 

Pond 531 

Polities  and  Politicians,  by  G.  P  Eager  532 
The  Beauty  of  the  Latin  Language,  by 

S.  Webster         533 

Greek    Trots    and    Their    Use,    J.    M. 

McClenahan 533 

How  to  Sleep,  C.  Johnson 533 

Religion  and  Its  Disadvantages,  by  R.  E. 

Lyford 534 

Getting  High  in  the  Church,  by  J.  J.  S.  535 
Running  as  a  Science,  by  D.  B.  Lourie  536 
Rapid-Fire  Methods  in  Fussing,  J.  W. 

Laird 537 

The  Art  of  Collecting  Money,  C.  Lamont  538 
Beauty  Secrets  and  How  I  Used  Them, 

R.  G.  Johnson 539 

Eulogy  on  Probation,  G.  H.  Love  .  .  540 
Handbook   ot    Military   Mistakes,   J.   C. 

Willson ' 541 

Pean  Board  .  .  .  Facing  the  Mad  House 
Battalion Facing  Front 


Girl  for  Dance.  Must  be  good-looking  and 
know  how  to  dance.  Send  application  to  Box 
777  P.  E.  A. 

Cigarette.  G.  B.  Townsend,  Gihnan 
House. 

For  Sale 

Second-hand  Ford  in  fine  condition.  Com- 
pletely worn  out,  but  looks  well  as  mantel 
ornament.  Apply  E.  W.  Sweezy,  Edward 
Gilman  House. 

Old  Gymnasium  in  poor  condition.  Make 
bids  to  P.  E.  A.      Improvement  Committee. 

Permission  to  dig  trenches.  Apply  P.  E.  A. 
Battalion. 


V-       '(' 


-  s."  * 


Advertise  in  the  Exonian — It  Doesn't  Pay, 
But  We  Need  the  Money 


k*« 


Wanted 


A  good  Homer  translation.  J.  H.  T.,  10 
Center  Street. 

Ball  of  Skirmish  Line.  Apply  P.  E.  A. 
Battalion. 

Cicero  Trot.    Apply  Upper  Middle  Class. 

Some  Mail.    Everyone. 


i ' 


306 


THE  PEAL'S  PEAN 


■,*,■>, 


Ikthr,/vU'tl 


;  •  •  « 

I 


l» 


^ 


,  »  »  .. « 
»  *  "I  «* • 


^_— — -— — _  I  I  '  |     ■  , . ■      I       II         t  I  ■""""" *"- —  II     '!■ 11^       ' 


>°  *  t  *  2*  *  J  *  *  !  *■ 

_« ! *-   «     ft    .-JTjf...JiL„fe-»  Jfc- 


.*.•:':•-'*■.■ 


ijp    memori At) t/io«S 


p/<"Ture      Of  cO.  b 
fALL/„G    l» 

In     tHE     LoCker     roOm     oF     thE     nEw 

•  * .  S  S  m  •  •  • 

Larry  HUrd  in  change  aNd  noth/nG  eLSe 

ceNSoRed    


307 


►J 

o 
w 

u 

w 

H 


as; 


IF. 


^C 


>  niilil   '-, 


309 


THE  LIBBY  PATH 

Lover  of  nature,  as  of  peace,  u>as  he 

Who  in  the  tangled  ujoodland  caught  the  dream 
Of  this  fair  vistaed  tualk  along  the  stream, 

And  blazed  and  shaped  it  to  reality  : — 

Wild  groujth  of  underbrush  and  towering  tree, 
And  ever  and  anon  blue  mater's  gleam, 
Where  bridges  of  my  lady  birchtuood  seem 

Narcissuslike  their  images  to  see. 

The  Oxford  lads  u>ho  under  Ruskin's  care 
Labored  to  beautify  the  Hinhsey  Road 
For  all  their  pains  a  failure  left  behind ; 
But  here's  bequeathed  a  pathway  to  compare 
With  that  the  gentle  Addison  oft  trode 
Ere  he  became  Spectator  of  mankind. 


-J.  P.  W. 


310 


School  Calendar 


April,  1917 

27  1918  Pean  Board  starts  work. 

28  Pennsylvania    Relay;     Exeter    Prepara- 

tory School  Champions. 

28  English  play,  "Sherlock  Holmes,"  at 
Ioka  Theatre. 

28     Baseball.     Exeter,  6;  Colby,  0. 

30  Announcement  of  gift  of  W.  B.  Thomp- 
son for  new  tennis  courts. 

May 
2     Crew.     Exeter  defeats  Huntington. 
4    Baseball.    Exeter,  16;  Manchester,  0. 
9     Crew.     Victory    over    Cambridge    High 

and  Latin. 
9     Baseball.    Exeter,  20;  Gushing,  0. 
9     Major  Kelly  leaves  Battalion  for  R.  O. 

T.  C. 
12     Crew.     Two  races  lost  to  Middlesex. 

12  Cercle  Francais  dance 

13  Christian  Fraternity  Speaker,  "Rational 

Sex  Life,"  Rev.  A.  D.  Leavitt. 
16     Tennis.     Exeter,  7;  English  High,  0. 

18  First  Battalion  sham  battle. 

19  Track.    Exeter,  95;   M.  I.  T.,  '20,  13. 
19     Baseball.    Exeter,  10;  Lawrence,  1. 

19  Crew.  Exeter  wins  over  Boston  Col- 
lege High. 

26     Empire  State- Western  Club  dance. 

30  Track.  Exeter,  77;  all  other  schools,  77; 
at  Brown  Interscholastics. 

30  Memorial  Day  address,  Major  General 
W.  A.  Bancroft,  '74. 

30  Memorial  Day  parade     First  Battalion 

parade. 

31  Baseball.  Exeter,  5;  Rindge  Technical,  0. 

June 

2     Track.      Exeter,    73;     All-Boston    High 
Schools,  42. 

2     Golden  Branch  annual  banquet. 

6     Second  Battalion  sham  battle. 

6     Class  of  1892  reunion. 

9     Baseball.    Exeter,  5;  Yale  All-Stars,  0. 

9     Tennis.    Exeter,  5;  St.  Paul's,  4. 
18-23     College   Entrance    Board    Examina- 
tions. 


23     Cum  Laude  Society  dinner  and  initiation. 
23     Twenty-first  annual  Merrill  Prize  speak- 
ing contest. 

23  Exeter  delegation  to  Blairstown  starts. 

24  Baccalaureate  sermon  by  Dr.  A.  P.  Fitch. 

25  Class  day  exercises.    Presentation  of  the 

class  of  1917  flag  pole. 
25     Alumni  dinner.     Reunions,  classes,  '67, 

'77,  '82,  '92,  '97,  '07. 
25     Announcement  of  $200,000  Tuck-Curley 

gift- 

25  June  ball. 

26  Commencement    exercises.      Prizes    and 

25  classical  and  96  English  diplomas 
awarded. 
26     Spring  term  ends. 

September 

19     135th  year  of  Academy  commences. 

22  Saturday      Nighter.        Annual   Senior 

Council  reception  to  new  students. 

23  Christian    Fraternity    Discussion.      Dr. 

Perry,  "Exeter  Ideals  and  its  Christian 

Fraternity." 
29     Football.    Exeter,  30;    Cushing,  0. 
29     Saturday  Nighter.    Stag  dance. 

29  100th  year  of  Golden  Branch  Literary 

Society  commences. 

30  Christian    Fraternity.      Dr.    Perry,    "A 

Successful  Life." 


October 

3    School  escorts  National  Army  quota  to 

station. 
6.     Football.     Exeter,    7;     Bumkin   Island 

Naval  Reserves,  0. 

6  Saturday  Nighter.     Impromptu  vaude- 

ville. 

7  Christian  Fraternity  discussion.    "What 

to  Avoid  at  Exeter." 

10  Eugene  Galligan  arrives  to  head  Bat- 
talion. 

10  Andover  trustees  discuss  possibilities  of 
game  with  Exeter. 


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13    Y.  M.  C.  A.  War  Fund  starts. 

13    Football.  Exeter,  13;  Colby  Academy,  6. 

13     Saturday  Nighter.    Yarrick  the  magician. 

13  Andover    trustees    oppose    game    with 

Exeter. 

14  Christian     Fraternity     meeting.         Dr. 

Perry,  "Positive  Side  of  Exeter  Life." 

15  Y.  M.  C.  A.  War  Fund  mass  meeting. 
20     Football.    Exeter,  0;  Yale,  '21,  20. 
20     Chances  for  Andover  game  improve. 
20     Red  Cross  benefit  in  Town  Hall. 

20  Meeting  of  Trustees.     T.  W.  Lamont, 

'88,  elected  trustee  of  the  Academy. 

21  Christian     Fraternity     Speaker.     Com- 

mander Thomas  Mott  Osborne,  "Pris- 
on Reform." 

27     Battalion  sham  battle. 

27     Football.    Exeter,  0;    Princeton,  '21,  12. 

27  Christian  Fraternity.  Hallowe'en  enter- 
tainment. 

27  Judge  Shute  reader  at  Golden  Branch 
meeting. 

27  Game  with  Andover  certain. 

28  Christian    Fraternity    speaker.    Ensign 
Austin  McCormick,  "The  Mutual  Wel- 
fare League." 

28     Christian    Fraternity    delegation    visits 
Andover. 


November 

3  Football.  Exeter,  7;  Harvard,  '21,  7. 

3  Southern  Club  dance. 

7  Y.  M.  C.  A.  War  Fund  reaches  $4,650. 

10  Football'.     Exeter,   15;    Portland  Naval 

Reserves,  0. 

10  Chapel  entertainment.    Melodie  Trio. 

10  Webster  Hall  dance. 

11  Faculty  discussion  groups  commence. 

14  Lowers  win  class  football  championship 

by  Seniors  defeating  Uppers. 

15  Andover  game  mass  meeting  in  chapel. 
17     Football.    Exeter,  3;    Andover,  0. 

17  Chapel  entertainment.  King-Marshall 
Duo  and  Davis,  the  Magician. 

17  Empire  State-Bay  State  Clubs  dance. 

18  Chapel  Speaker.   Bishop  De Wolfe  Perry, 

Bishop  of  Rhode  Island. 

18  Dr.  Perry  Christian  Fraternity  Speaker. 
"A  Student  in  Arms. " 

20  Ensign  McCormick  begins  discussion 
series  on  "Prison  Reform." 

25  Christian  Fraternity  Elson  Art  Exhibi- 
tion. 

24  Battalion  football  series  starts. 

25  Christian  Fraternity  reception  to  faculty. 

Speaker,  Mr.  J.  T.  Bagocius,  "Russia 
and  the  War." 
29     Thanksgiving  Day,  a  holiday. 


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December 

1     Andover  delegation  at  Christian  Frater- 
nity. 

1     Academy   Vaudeville.     Show   afternoon 
and  evening  at  the  Opera  House. 

6     Illustrated    lecture.     Mr.  Rogers,  "The 
Hohenzollern  Dynasty." 

9     Chapel  Speaker,  Dr.  Henry  H.  Tweedy, 
of  Yale. 
12     First  Merrill    lecture.     Francis    Wilson, 
"The  Humorous  Side  of  an    Actor's 
Life." 

15  Christmas    entertainment     in     Chapel. 

Recitals  by  Mr.  Webber  and  songs  by 
Mr.  Shrewsbury. 
14     First  Service  Issue.     Christmas  number 
out. 

16  Christian   Fraternity   Speaker.     Francis 

B.  Sayre,  "TheY.M.C.  A.  in  France." 

18  Dunbar  Hall  plays. 

19  Fall    Term    closes.       Announcement    of 

honors  and  scholarships. 


January 

9     Winter  term  begins. 

10  Merrill  Lecture.  John  I.  Solomon,  "The 
Romance  of  Pearl  Fishing."  Illus- 
trated. 

13  Chapel  Speaker.  Dr.  Clarence  A.  Bar- 
bour. 

13  Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.  Professor 
Tufts,  "Old  Exeter."     Illustrated. 

16     Exonian  becomes  a  weekly. 

16     Hockey.    Exeter,  3;  Rindge  Technical,  1. 

16  Merrill    Lecture.      Arthur    Delroy,    "A 

Psychic  Melange." 

17  Chapel      Speaker.         Arthur       Delroy, 

"Physics." 
19     Hockey.    Exeter,  0;    Brookline,  2. 

19  Mrs.  Perry's  Dance. 

20  Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.     Dr.  W. 

W.  Peters,  "China  of  To-day  and  To- 
morrow."   Illustrated. 

20     Amphion  Club  Concert.  Webster  Hall. 

23     Hockey.    Exeter,  2;    Cambridge  Latin,  1. 

23  Merrill  Lecture.  Ex-President  Taft, 
"The  Great  War." 


OF  THE  WINTER  TELR/A 


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26  Hockey.    Exeter,  0;  Harvard, '21,  (3. 

27  Chapel  Speaker.     Dr.  Alfred  E.  Stearns, 

of  Andover. 

27  Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.  Mrs. 
Butler-Wilson,  "The  Negro  in  War  and 
Peace." 

30  Merrill  Lecture.  Donald  B.  MacMillan, 
"The  Search  for  New  Land."  Illus- 
trated . 

30     Hockey.    Exeter,  0:  Melrose,  1. 

February 
2     Track.      Victory   of   Relay   Team   over 

Andover  at  B.  A.  A.  Meet. 
2     Dunbar  Hall  Dance. 
2     Lecture.    A.  G. Glover, "South America." 

2  Hockey.    Exeter,  0;  St.  Paul's,  10. 

3  Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.    George  E. 

Roewer,  Jr.,  "The  A.  B.  Cs.  of  Social- 
ism." 

6     Merrill   Lecture.     Lincoln  Wirt,    "Our 
Little  Brothers  in  Fur." 

9     Chapel  Entertainment.    Hampton  Quar- 
tette. 
10     Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.    Rev.  W. 
G.  Puddefoot,   "The  Land  Yet  to  Be 
Possessed." 

12  Chapel  Speaker.    Mr.  Rogers,  "Political 

Conditions  in  Germany." 

13  Merrill  Lecture.    Prof.  George  N.  Cross, 

"David  Lloyd  George." 
16     Hockey.    Exeter,  2;    Andover,  3. 

16  Recital.     Mr.  Webber,  "The  Taming  of 

the  Shrew." 

17  Christian     Fraternity    Speaker.       Prof. 

C.     R.  Skinner,    "The   Essentials    of 
Democracy." 


18  Chapel  Speaker.  Mr.  McKendrick, 
"Germany  and  Austria  Hungary.  " 

20  Lecture  in  Ioka  Theatre  and  War  Films. 

Dr.  Johnson. 

21  Exeter  becomes  Co-Educational. 

21     Golden  Branch  Centennial  Dinner. 

21  Musical  Clubs  Concert  in  Town  Hall. 

22  Washington's  Birthday,  a  holiday. 

22     Unfurling  Service  Flag  of  1,124  Stars. 
Announcement  of   military   and   aca- 
demic honors. 
22     Centennial  Celebration  of  Golden  Branch 

Literary  Society. 
22     Track.      Faculty   Shield   Meet   won    by 
Seniors. 
Hockey.    Exeter,  1 ;  Tufts,  0. 
Dedication  of  Thompson  Gymnasium. 
Washington's  Birthday  Dance. 
Illustrated    Lecture.      Professor    Tufts, 

"Sir  Walter  Scott." 
Exeter  resumes  Education. 
New  Swimming  Pool  used  for  the  first 

time. 
Merrill  Lecture.  Capt.  H.  Radcliffe 
Dugmore,  "Fighting  it  Out."  Illus- 
trated. 
Navy  League  Roof  Garden  Party.  Mr. 
Webber  in  dramatic  sketch,  "Water- 
loo." 

March 
2     Battalion     Recruiting     Mass     Meeting. 

Major  Boyer  speaks. 
2     War  Lecture.    Major  Boyer,  "Life  in  the 

Trenches." 
6     Lecture.     Dr.  Perry,  "The  Elizabethan 

Period  and  Macbeth." 
9     Musical  Clubs  Concert  at  Wellesley. 
9     War    Lecture.      Charles    Woods,    "The 

Balkans."    Illustrated. 
1 1     Battalion  enlarged  to  four  companies. 
13     Seniors  decide  to  wear  caps  and  gowns. 
16     Chapel       Speaker.       Mr.       Chadwick, 

"Causes  of  the  War. " 
16     Musical  Clubs  Concert  at  Jordan  Hall, 
Boston. 

16  War  Lecture.    Mr.  A.  C.  Church,  "Sub- 

marines."    Illustrated. 

17  Harvard  Club  Smoker. 

17  Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.  Dean 
Yeomans,  of  Harvard,  "The  First 
Year  in  College. " 


22 
22 
22 
23 

23 
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27 


28 


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28 


Chapel  Speaker.     Mr.  Chadwick,  "The 

Background  of  the  War. " 
War  Lecture.     Dr.  Albert  Parker  Fitch, 

of    Amherst;     "The    Red     Cross    in 

France." 
Joint  musical  concert  with  Andover  at 

Andover. 
Chapel  Speaker.    Dr.  Fitch,  of  Amherst. 
Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.     Dr.  Al- 
bert Bushnell  Hart,  "No  Royal  Road 

to  Peace." 
Discussion  Series  on  Prison  Reform  by 

Ensign  McCormick  closes. 
Anniversary  Issue  and   Second   Service 

Issue  of  Exonian  out. 
Christian   Fraternity    Budget.      Pledges 

taken. 

April 

Chapel  Speaker.    Dr.  William  L.  Phelps, 

of  Yale. 
G.   L.  Soule  defeats  Golden  Branch  in 

annual  debate. 
Announcement  of  Honors.    Winter  term 

ends. 
Exeter  Officers'  Training  Corps  starts. 
Spring  term  begins. 
Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.    Dr.  H.  F. 

Ward,  "The  Human  Element  of  the 

Labor  Problem." 
Exonian  resumes  as  a  semi-weekly. 
Chapel  Speaker.    Rev.  A.  Black. 
Baseball.    Exeter,  18;   Lowell  Textile,  1. 
School  escorts  National  Army  quota  to 

station. 
Track.     Hill  School  wins  Penn   Relay, 

Exeter  third. 
Baseball.    Exeter,  4;  Tilton  Seminary,  1 . 
Chapel  Entertainment.    L.  Adler,  piano 

recital. 
Chapel  Speaker.     President  C.  A.  Bar- 
bour. 
Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.    Dr.  H.  F. 

Ward,  "After  the  War,  What?" 

May 

Captain  Dion  arrives  to  take  charge  of 
Battalion.  Battalion  review. 


P.  H. 
Illus- 


ion 


11 
11 


4     Baseball.    Exeter,  5;  Camp  Devens,  1. 

4  Tennis.    Exeter,  2;  Harvard, '21,  4. 

5  Christian     Fraternity     Speaker.       Tom 

Farmer,   "Experiences  in  Prison  and 
Out." 
8     Baseball.     Exeter,  14;    Lawrence  Acad- 
emy, 2. 
8     Christian  Fraternity  Speaker.    Dr. 
Goldsmith,  "South  America." 
trated. 

Tennis.       Harvard    Interscholastics, 
Andover,     12;     Exeter,    4;     Newton 
High,  4. 
Track.    Exeter,  69;   Harvard,  '21,  39. 
Crew.     Four  wins  triangular  race  over 
Huntington  and  Brookline. 
11     Baseball.      Exeter,    9;     Gushing    Acad- 
emy, 0. 
11     Mrs.  Perry's  dance  to  Battalion. 

14  Principal  Stearns  and  Major  Davies.   of 

Andover,  address  and  review  Battalion. 

15  Baseball.    Exeter,  5;  Goddard  Seminary, 

0.    Called  in  second  inning. 

18  Track.  Exeter  wins  Yale  Interschol- 
astics. 

IS     Tennis.    Exeter,  6;   M.  I.  T.,  '21,  0. 

18  Baseball.     Exeter,   23;    Fort   Constitu- 

tion, 0. 

19  Chapel  Speaker.    Rev.  W.  J.  Chidley. 

20  Red  Cross  Drive.    Exeter  pledges,  $2,000. 
20     Six   clays   required   athletics   rule   takes 

effect. 

22  Chapel  Speaker.  Dr.  Luther  H.  Gulick, 
' '  Spirit  of  the  French . ' ' 

22  Baseball.  Exeter,  17;  Brewster  Acad- 
emy, 1. 

22  P.    E.    A.    War   Savings    and    Patriotic 

League  started. 

23  War  Savings  Stamps  sale  total  $2,500. 
25     Battalion  and  students  escort  40  drafted 

men  to  station. 
25     Baseball.    Exeter,  6;  Portland  High,  2. 
25     Crew.      Exeter    fours    win    both    races 

from  Middlesex. 
25     Golf.    Exeter,  4;  Harvard, '21,  0. 
25     Tennis.    Babb  wins  school  championship 

over  Holmes. 
25     Battalion  benefit    vaudeville    at    Opera 

House. 


323 


"AUTO  STROP  RAZOR" 
For  Sale  by  Exeter  Hardware  Dealers 


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Opposite  Hoyt  Hall 


=THOMAS  P.  AHEARN,  Proprietor 


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"BARCALO"  KAPOC  MATTRESS 


It  insures  sound  sleep  with  which  to  restore  the 
Vigor  so  necessary  in  the  Great  Battle  of  Life 


324 


26 

26 

29 

29 

30 
30 


30 

30 
31 


Chapel  Speaker.     Dr.  H.  H.  Tweedy,  of 

Yale. 
Golden  Branch,  20;    G.  L.  Soule,  7,  in 

annual  baseball  game. 
Baseball.      Exeter,    14;     Rindge    Tech- 
nical, 3. 
English  play,  "The  American  Lord,"  at 

the  Ioka  Theatre. 
Memorial  Day.    A  holiday. 
Memorial    Day    exercises    in    honor  of 

Exeter  men  who  died  in  the  Great  War. 

Speaker,  Prof.  Bliss  Perry,  of  Harvard. 
Battalion    marches    in    Memorial    Day 

parade. 
Track.    Exeter,  72}^;   Andover,  23 J^. 
Senior  class  pledges  $300  in  War  Savings 

Stamps  as  gift  to  Academy. 


June 
1     Tennis.    Exeter,  5;  Andover,  4. 
1     Crew.     Eight  loses  to  Noble  and  Green- 
ough. 


1     Harvard-Yale-Princeton  Clubs  dance. 
5     Baseball.     Exeter,     7;     Bumkin    Island 

Naval  Reserves,  5. 
8     Baseball.    Exeter,  10;   Andover,  1. 
8     Class  of  1893  Reunion. 
17-22     College    Entrance    Board    Examina- 
tions. 
16     Chapel  Speaker.    Dr.  Charles  R.  Brown, 

of  Yale. 
22     Merrill  Prize  Speaking  Contest. 

Baccalaureate    Sermon.  Dr.    C.    R. 

Brown. 
Class  Day  Exercises. 
Alumni  dinner.    Class  reunions. 
"Julius  Caesar"  presented. 
Commencement.     Award  of  prizes  and 
diplomas.     Spring  term  ends. 
30     1918  Pean  Board  still  working. 

July 
1      1918     Pean    Board    placed    in    private 
sanatorium. 


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THE  END  OF  IT  ALL 


325 


JAMES  H.  TATTERSALL 
1902     P.  E.  A.  Jeweler    isis 

Exclusive  Jewelry  for  the  Most  Exacting  Tastes 

In  Rings,  Brooches,  Pins,  etc. 
«$•» 

Mail   orders   solicited   and   all  inquiries  answered 

131  WATER  STREET     .     .     .     EXETER,  N.  H. 

J.  W.  ROBERTS  COMPANY 

Established   1851 

Wholesale  Grocers 

»*■ 

"White  and   Gold"   Canned   Goods  and   Food   Specialties 

81-83  South  Market  Street     .      BOSTON,  MASS. 


UNITED  STATES  HOTEL 

Beach,  Lincoln  and  Kingston  Streets 
BOSTON 


Only  two  blocks  from  the  South  Terminal  Station,  and  easily  reached  from  North  Station  by  Elevat- 
ed Railway,  and  convenient  alike  to  the  great  retail  shops  and  business  centre,  and  also  to  theatres  and 
places  of  interest. 

EUROPEAN   PLAN:   $1.00  per  day  and  upwards. 
Table  and  service  unsurpassed.  Map  sent  upon  application. 

TILLY  HAYNES,  Prop. 
JAMES  G.  HICKEY,  Manager. 


326 


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327 


EvMed 


BUSINESS  IS  BUSINESS 

That  business  is  business  has  often  been  said, 

But  to  call  it  what  war  is,  oft  enters  my  head. 
'Tis  plan,  work  and  figure  on  this  thing  and  that. 

When  all  seems  going  right,  you  must  change  quick  as  scat. 
Whatever  your  price  when  you  sell,  a  man's  sore, 

And  whatever  you  offer  when  you  buy,  he  wants  more. 

Human  nature  we  find  just  the  same  everywhere, 

In  the  rough  country  boob,  or  her  ladyship  fair, 
On  the  outermost  ranch  or  the  great  city  mart, 

In  the  humblest  cottage  or  palace  of  art, 
So  it  is  with  the  fellows  in  this  school  of  great  fame 

They  are  human  all  through,  and  of  course,  I'm  the  same. 

'Tis  the  game  table  of  life  we  are  playing  about, 

Where  each  for  himself  tries  hard  to  win  out. 
If  each  one  plays  fair,  it's  really  great  fun 

Then  all  part  good  friends,  whichever  has  won. 
May  it  be  in  the  future,  as  it  has  in  the  past, 

Though  you  sometimes  judge  harshly,  you  realize  at  last 
That  the  little  we  get  is  really  our  due 

For  its  total  would  make  but  pin  money  for  you. 

Just  think  what  'twill  cost  me  to  publish  this  rhyme. 

If  I  charged  in  proportion,  you'd  call  it  a  crime. 
A  desk  would  cost  dollars,  in  place  of  each  cent, 

Time  you  got  half  an  outfit,  your  roll  would  be  spent. 
As  it  is,  fifty  bones  makes  considerable  show, 

If  you  buy  it  at  Meras,'  the  people  who  know. 

For  business  is  business,  just  the  same. 

And  Meras  is  still  at  the  head  of  the  game. 
We  buy  and  we  sell,  we  pack,  ship  and  store, 

Try  to  have  all  you  want,  how  could  we  do  more? 
With  best  wishes  to  you,  and  Dear  Old  P.  E.  A., 
I'll  tell  you  next  time,  if  P.  E.  A.  N.  ads  really  pay. 
Sincerely  yours, 

RALPH  E.  MERAS,  ex-'03. 


328 


329 


ESTABLISHED  1873 


A.  S.  WETHERELL,  Druggist 

This  store  has  been  Headquarters  for  the  students  of  the  Academy  for  forty-five 
years  with  an  ever  increasing  patronage.  We  carry  the  largest  and  best  assortment 
of  students'  supplies. 

Our  Soda  and  Ice  Cream  of  our  own  make  is  acknowledged  to  be  superior  to  all 
others.  A  full  line  of  P.  E.  A.  Stationery  of  special  design  for  the  season  of  1918  and 
1919  will  be  ready  for  the  opening  of  school  in  September. 

A  large  assortment  of  B.  B.  B.  Pipes  with  silver  "E".  Agent  for  the  finest  con- 
fectionery of 

Huyler,  Whitman,  Lovell  &  Covel — Always  in  Stock 

We  shall  be  pleased  to  serve  you 

WETHERELL'S  DRUG  STORE,  Exeter 


1918 


1919 


With  hearty  appreciation  for  past  favors 
I  wish  to  extend  the  hope  that  the  year 
of  1918--1919  may  be  happy  and  pros- 
perous for  each  and  every  one  of  my 
customers. 


PHILIP  WHITE 


TAILOR  TO  P.  E.  A.  SINCE  1892 


OPPOSITE  ACADEMY  OFFICE 


EXETER,  NEW  HAMPSHIRE 


330 


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331 


at  sleeper's    Jewelry  and  Optical  Store 

You  will  find  the  Finest  Line  of  P.  E.  A.  JEWELRY  in  Exeter 

When  there  is  anything  new  we  get  it.  We  carry  the  finest  line  of  FOUNTAIN 
PENS  in  Exeter.  We  do  FIRST-CLASS  WATCH  REPAIRING  and  employ  an  eye 
specialist  who  makes  examinations  and  fills  all  prescriptions  quickly  and  accurately. 

ON    THE    SQUARE 

EXETER,  -  -  -  N.  H. 


A.    E.    McREEL   CO 


•  •  •    \^kJI\L/    •  •  • 


Water  Street,     Exeter,  N.  H. 


All  SPORTING  GOODS  bought  at  reason- 
able prices,  and  you  get  a  square  deal.  I 
also  Clean,  Dye,  Press  and  Repair  all  Boys' 
Suits.  Your  suit  is  called  for  and  the  work 
guaranteed. 

PETER  NICHOLS 

227  WATER  ST.,        -       -        Exeter,  N.  H 
Formerly  Heartz  Second  Hand  Store 


Students'    Dry    Goods,  Sheets,  Pillow  Slips,    Bed  Spreads,  Blankets,    Comforters, 
Towels,  Handkerchiefs,  etc.,  at 

LONDON'S    STORE 

119-121  Water  Street  -  -  -  Exeter,  N.  H. 


W.  C.  SPAULDING 

W.  H.  NUTE,  M.  D. 

SCHOOL    SUPPLIES 

Residence  and  Office  : 

BANK  BUILDING 

Victrolas — All  Latest  Victor  Records 

Opposite    Squamscott    House 

Nearest  News  Stand  and  Stationery  Store 
to  Academy  Grounds 

FRONT   STREET 

CENTER  ST.,  EXETER,  N.  H. 

Exeter,  N.  H. 

.  .  SMITH'S    SHOE    STORE  .  . 
COLLEGE     SHOES     FOR     COLLEGE    MEN 

Cordovan  Shoes,  Army  Shoes,  (Munson  Last,)  Tennis  Shoes,  Dancing  Ties 
Smith  Building  SMITH'S       SHOE      STORE  Exeter,  N.  H. 


332 


333 


I 


F  you  cannot  be  with  the  boys  in  the  trenches,  back  them  up. 

BUY  W.  S.  S. 

GEORGE  C.  LANKLER. 


W.  B.  KENNISTON,  M.  D. 

FRONT  STREET 

EXETER,  NEW  HAMPSHIRE 


The  Wiley-Bickford-Sweet  Co. 

The    Wra.   H.  Wiley  &  Son  Division 

HARTFORD,  CONN. 


GRADUATES  HOUSE 


EXETER 


Offers  comfortable  lodgings  for  the  parents  and  friends 
of  the  students 


HURD  BROS.,  Inc. 

Rough    and    Dressed    Lumber 


BUFFALO,  N.  Y. 


334 


wx 


335 


.*.  IOKA  THEATRE 


CATERS  TO  EXETER  STUDENTS 


R.  C.  ROGERS,    THE   TAILOR 

Clothes  Cleaned,  Pressed  and  Repaired         -  -  Ranlet's  Block — Up  one  flight 

139  WATER  STREET,  EXETER,  N.  H. 

83F"     Being  upstairs  and  doing  business  under  small  expense,  I  know  I  can  save  you  money. 


Longer  Life  To  Shoes 


"Oil  Paste"  Polish 


For  all  kinds  of  Black  Shoes 

Blacks,    Polishes,    Preserves 

a.so  Russet  "Oil  Paste" 

Same  size  box, 

Ask  Your  Dealer  for 


There  is  a  Difference  in  Polishes 


Holeproof  Hosiery 

LISLE,  35  Cents 

SILK  FACED,  50  Cents 

PURE  SILK,  75  Cents 

All  Colors 


D.  SANBORN  CO. 

Sole  Agents 


336 


>■• 


.■■■■■'■■.'■        :■'. .■■"::.    .' 


-'^ 2 ; itrfmnff 


337 


J.  P.  MORGAN  &  CO 

Wall  Street,  Corner  of  Broad 
NEW  YORK 


DREXEL  &  CO.,  PHILADELPHIA 

Corner  of  5  th  and  Chestnut  Streets 


MORGAN,  GRENFELL&CO..  LONDON 

No.  22   Old  Broad  Street 


MORGAN,    HARJES  &  CO.,  PARIS 

31   Boulevard   Haussmann 


Securities  bought  and  sold  on    Commission 

Foreign  Exchange  Commercial  Credits 

Cable  Transfers 

Circular  Letters  for  Travelers  available  in  all  parts  of  the  world 


338 


Fie  I'd    iucCiC 


I 


3k '^l^sa.  1381 

:   m&  ^  ^- v^** 


339 


Conservative  Investment  Securities 

Bonds        Notes         Preferred  Stocks 

at  prices   to   yield   the   best  returns 
consistent    with    true    conservatism 

We   shall   be   glad   to   send   descriptive   circulars   on   request 

Bonongnt   vy    Company 

Incorporated 

New  York  Boston  Philadelphia  Chicago  Detroit 

DIEGES  y  CLUST 

"If  we   made   it,   its   right 

Class  Pins  Class  Rings 

Fraternity  Pins  Medals  and  Cups 


149    Tremont     Street 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


THE  CHAS.  H.  ELLIOTT  CO 

The   Largest   College   Engraving   House   in   the   World 

Wedding   Invitations  Calling   Cards 

Commencement  Invitations      Class  Day  Programs 
Class  Pins  and  Ring's 

Dance  Programs  and  Invitations         Menus        Leather  Dance  Cases  and  Covers 
Fraternity   and   Class   Inserts   for   Annuals      Fraternity   and   Class   Stationery 

Seventeenth  Street  and  Lehigh  Avenue,  Philadelphia 


340 


iSperfjMj  |  **&&&>,  -fagQe 


341 


FOR  YOUR 
ROOM 

You  have  noticed  in  the  Saturday  Evening  Post  and 
other  leading  publications  the  advertisments  of 

i847  ROGERS  BROS. 

SILV  F.  R  \V  A  R   F 

Artistic    reproductions    of   these    will    be  sent  upon 
yourj  request.        Write  to  Advertising  Department  of 


INTERNATIONAL  SILVER  CO.     .     .     MERIDEN,  CONN. 


Watch  for  "LIFT  THE  DOT"  Fasteners 


71TTW  MlUW/'fl 'i  [(/Ml  I  III  llil  lidllTI  II 


}LIFTTHE1>0T 


© 


(5) 


TheyASnap  ^Together 

And  become  locked  on  three'sides 

To  unlock  LIFT  DOTTED  SIDE  of  socket 

As  shown  in  cut  at  left 

Manufactured  by 

CARR  FASTENER  COMPANY 

CAMBRIDGE,  MASS.,  U.  S.  A. 


"Hammer  Brand"  Pocket  Knives 

"Made  to  Cut  and  Stay  Sharp" 

NEW  YORK    KNIFE    COMPANY 
WALDEN,   N.   Y. 


342 


343 


COTRELL  &  LEONARD  ::  Albany,  N.  Y. 

OFFICIAL  MAKERS  OF 

CAPS,  GOWNS  AND  HOODS 

To  Phillips  Exeter,  Harvard,  Yale,  Dartmouth,  Radcliffe,  Mt.  Holyoke, 
Bryn  Mawr,  Wellesley,  Cornell,  Princeton,  University  of  Pennsyl- 
vania, University  of  the  South,  Tufts,  Stamford,  Columbia,  Tulane, 
University  of  Virginia,  New  York  University,  University  of  Minne- 
sota, Brown,  University  of  California,  and  many  others. 

Correct  Hoods  for  All  Degrees.  Rich  Robes  for  Pulpit  and 
Bench.    Bulletin,  Samples,  etc.,  on  request. 


E.  W.  NASH  CO. 

ESTABLISHED  1872 

Importers,  Manufacturers 
and  Dealers  in 

Paints,  Varnishes,  Shellacs,  Brushes 
Glues,  Gums 

Eastern  Distributors  for  John  W.  Masury  &  Son 

559-561  Atlantic  Avenue 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


BATCHELDER  &  SNYDER  CO. 

Packers  and  Poultry  Dressers 

WHOLESALE  ONLY 

Beef,  Mutton,  Lamb,  Veal,  Pork,  Hams,  Bacon, 
Sausages,  Poultry,  Game,  Butter,  Cheese,  Eggs, 
Olive  Oils.     Fresh,  Smoked  and  Cured  Fish. 

BLACKSTONE,  NORTH  AND  NORTH  CENTRE  STREETS 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


OFFICES  AND  STORES 


344 


345 


St 


%CT  PI  TTATPTAVT 

MADE  WITH  BOTH  EYE5  ON  OUR  J 
Wl— T      Urx«TTVT\ 


>£G      U    S.    P>*T.     OFF     THE.      W.CE 


OiMun. 

■£,    CifisAWo/jV/s     i 
''*       Oils 


-J 


Oilzuin, 

S|  -i.     UASjSjVCrM'Ji       X    I 

"  ,      Om      ^     / 


MANUFACTURED    BY 

The  Wh  ite  &  Bagley  Company 

WORCESTER.    MASS. 
U.S.A. 


346 


347 


JOSHUA  THORNDIKE 


RUDOLF  STOLAR 


Telephones  :  883-885  RICHMOND 


THORNDIKE  8C  STOLAR 

WHOLESALE  AND  RETAIL  DEALERS  IN 

.    BEEF,  PORK,  LAMB  AND  VEAL    .    . 

STALLS  3  AND  5  NEW  FANEUIL  HALL  MARKET 
BOSTON,  MASS. 


METAL  PRODUCTS 

Macullar   Parker 

Brass  -  Copper  -  Bronze 
SHEETS-ROLLS-PIECES 

Company 

400  Washington  St.,  Boston 

Cut  to  Dimension 

Makers  of  Clothes  for 

ROD  -TUBE  -WIRE 
ANGLE 

Young    Men    at    School    and    College, 
Dependable  Fabrics,  Workman- 
ship and  Styles 

Vulcanized    Fibre 

"Their  SERVICE  exceeds  their    PRICE" 

In  All  Forms 

FINE  FURNISHINGS 

STEEL 

Stetson  Hats 

Automobile     Tubing  -  Connections 
and  Bushing  Stock 

CUSTOM  DEPARTMENT 

For  Garments  to  Order 

Homer  r.Livermore,  Inc. 

85  PEARL  ST.,  BOSTON 

Macullar  Parker  Company 

348 


iwaww  "m  "•r....j  wmaanu !.&nuiiiumi« 


349 


- 


The  Horace  Partridge  Company 

Manufacturers  of  High  Class 

ATHLETIC  GOODS 

SALESROOMS: 
49-51  Franklin  Street,  Boston,  Mass. 


Outfitters  to  the  leading  colleges,  academies  and  schools.  Exclusive  outfitters  to  Exeter  Academy 
teams.  Wholesale  prices  on  all  athletic  goods  to  Exeter  students.  Send  for  illustrated  cata- 
logue, free  upon  request. 


RIPE  MAINE 
ASPBERRIES 


MAKE  THE  FOUNDATION 
FOR  THE  OTHER  FRUITS 
BLENDED  IN 


HAY'S  FIVE  FRUIT 

The  unequaled  fruit  punch  syrup.  Send  for  a  folder 
telling  other  uses  of  HAY'S  FIVE  FRUIT. 

PRESENT  PRICES  -SUBJECT  TO  CHANGE 

Pints,  $0.50  Quarts,  $0.90 

Gallons,  $2.50 

Supplied  by  S.  S.  Pierce,  Boston,  Mass., 
and  all  good  grocers 


H.H.HAY  SONS 

PORTLAND,  MAINE. 


350 


I  ff/iUf 


M         '   S 


I 


1918  ";■ 


«•    <■- , .  '.» 


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351 


TUTORING  IN  CAMBRIDGE 

The  teachers  named  below,  Harvard  Graduates  of  long  experience  in  teaching,  thoroughly 
familiar  with  Harvard  requirements,  will  receive  this  summer,  as  usual,  pupils  in  Cambridge 
in  preparation  for  the  admission  examinations.  Instruction  will  be  furnished  preparatory  to 
entrance,  to  the  removal  of  conditions,  or  to  the  anticipation  of  college  studies.  The  work 
is  divided  by  subjects  among  different  teachers,  and  the  methods  of  instruction  insure  the  best 
possible  adaptation  to  special  needs.    Excellent  laboratory  facilities  provided. 

Students  from  a  distance  can  have  pleasant  accommodations  procured  for  them  and  much 
care  is  given  to  their  comfort  and  enjoyment.  There  are  ample  opportunities  for  tennis,  rowing 
and  other  outdoor  recreations.  A  special  dining  hall  and  two  dormitories  are  maintained  for  the 
use  of  the  candidates.  Reference  may  be  made  to  recent  Harvard  or  Exeter  graduates,  any 
executive  officer  of  Harvard  College,  or  will  be  furnished  in  any  large  city.  Of  those  prepared  by 
these  teachers  for  college  entrance  examinations  during  the  past  twenty  years  less  than  five  per 
cent,  have  failed  to  be  admitted  to  regular  standing  in  the  Freshman  Class.  The  instruction  is 
divided  as  follows: 

THE  LANGUAGES 
Max  Benshimol,  A.M.  J.  Rowe  Webster,  A.B.  George  N.  Henning,  A.M. 

Hollis  Webster,  A.M.  Percy  W.  Long,  Ph.D.  Reginald  R.  Goodell,  A.M. 

HISTORY  AND  ALLIED  SUBJECTS 
Max  Benshimol,  A.M.  J.  Clifford  Hall,  S.B.  William  W.  Nolen,  A.M. 

MATHEMATICS  AND  SCIENCE 
William  W.  Nolen,  A.M.        Charles  A.  Hobbs,  A.M.  Frank  A.  Sheldon,  A.B. 

WILLIAM  W.  NOLEN 

Long  Distance  'Phone,  Cambridge  027  Little  Hall  "I,"  CAMBRIDGE,  MASS. 

ILLUSTRATED  BOOKLET  ON  REQUEST 


THE  ONLY  SHOP  CATERING   EXCLUSIVELY  TO   STUDENTS 


Outfitters  to  the  Students  in  every 
phase  of  school  life  from  the 
Athletic  Field  to  the  Ball  Room 


THE  EXETER  SHOP 

"On  the  Campus" 
Run  by  Exeter  Men  for  Exeter  Men 

-A  COLLEGE  SHOP  IN  AN  ACADEMY  TOWN 


352 


353 


Co. 


1014  Chapel  St.4, 

New  Haven, Conn, 

505    Fifth    Avenue,    New    York    City 


MAKERS  OF  SMART  CLOTHES 


354 


355 


IN  COLLEGE  WORK,  IN  BUSINESS 

And  in  all  branches  of  activity 


THE  UNDERWOOD 

Stands  at  the  forefront  among   Typewriters 
RENT  OR  BUY  ONE 


W     A  REMINDER 


LE  JERZ  SHIRTINGS 

For  Men  and  Women 

When  you  buy  silk  shirts  ready-made 

or  silk  by  the  yard 

ask  your  retailer  to  show  you 

GENUINE  LE  JERZ  SILK 


MANUFACTURED    BY 


ROGERS  8C  THOMPSON,  Inc. 

CREATORS    OF    SILKS    PAR    EXCELLENCE 


356 


£    i 


3qurril 


357 


SOUND,  SOLID  AND  SUCCESSFUL 

Forty-Eighth  Progressive  Annual  Statement  of  the 

New  Hampshire  Fire  Insurance  Company 

Manchester,  N.  H. 
STATEMENT  JANUARY  1,   1918 

ASSETS 

United  States  Bonds $    329,500.00 

Real  Estate     300,000.00 

Municipal  and  other  Bonds  and  Stocks     5,691,977.00 

Loans  on  Bond  and  Mortgage,  etc 61,879.90 

Cash  in  Banks  and  Office 411,123.28 

Uncollected  Premiums,  etc 589,413 .  50 

$7 ,383 ,893 .  68 

LIABILITIES 

Capital  Stock      $1,500,000.00 

Reserve  for  Re-Insurance 3,157,186 .  54 

Reserve  for  Losses  378,322.32 

Reserve  for  Taxes  and  Expenses  accrued  but  not  due    115,000.00 

Reserve  for  Dividends  accrued  but  not  due      45,015.00 

Other  Reserve  Funds    76,170 .  29 

Net  Surplus    2,112,189.53 

S7 ,383 ,893 .  68 

OFFICERS 
Frank  W.  Sargeant,  President  Walter  M.  Parker,  Vice-President 

Nathan  P.  Hunt,  Treasurer  Frank  E.  Martin,  Secretary 

Lewis  W.  Crockett,  Secretary  William  B.  Burpee,  Secretary 

George  A.  French,  Assistant  Secretary  Charles  E.  Chase,  Assistant  Secretary 


Morandi--  Proctor  Co. 

86  Washington  Street 
Boston 

Designers  and   Manufacturers  of 

Cooking  Apparatus  for  Schools 
Academies  and  Colleges 


\AT  E  believe  that  quality,  prices  and  good  store 
*~     service    have    been    the    means   of    such   a 
large  share  of  your  patronage  during  the  school 
year.     We  thank  you  for  your  patronage. 

A.  E.  &  W.  HAYES' 
DRUG  STORES 

TWO  STORES 

91  Water  Street    .     152  Front  Street 

EXETER,  N.  H. 


"NOARK"  ELECTRICAL  PROTECTIVE  DEVICES 

Moulded  Mica  Overhead  Trolley  Insulation 

"Vulcabeston"  Moulded  Insulation 

Vulcabeston  Red  Fibre  Sheet  Packing 

Manufactured  by 

THE  JOHNS-PRATT  CO.,  Hartford,  Conn. 


358 


359 


Muir  Brothers  Company 

PLASTERERS 

201  Devonshire  Street 

Telephone    Fort    Hill    1344 

BOSTON 


contractors 
on  new  gymnasium 

Metal  Furring        Wire  Lathing 
Plastering 


360 


Hhil  IS' 


361 


Roman  and  Venetian  Mosaics,   Terrazzo  and  Marble  Composite 
Floor  and  Wall  Tiles  of  every  description  Ceramic  Mosaic 


Galassi  Mosaic  and  Tile  Co. 


Incorporated 


Contractors  for  the  New  Gymnasium 

127  Federal  Street 
BOSTON 


A.  E.  ROBERTS 


L.  BROWNING 


ROBERTS  &  BROWNING 

Plumbers 

Contractors  for  the  New  Gymnasium 

70  Washington  Street 
BOSTON 


362 


363 


HOLT--FAIRCHILD  COMPANY 

BOSTON,  MASS. 


BUILDERS  OF  THE  NEW  GYMNASIUM 


All  exterior  Indiana  Limestone  used  in  the  new 

Thompson  Gymnasium  of  the  Phillips  Exeter 

Academy  Quarried  and  Finished  by 


SHEA,  DONNELLY  8C  GIBERSON  CO. 


Bedford,  Ind.       Lynn,  Mass.        Boston,  Mass. 


364 


GRAND  STAND 

Wisconsin    State    Fair   Grounds 
Milwaukee,  Wis. 


BUILT  BY 


Kroenin£   Construction    Company 

Engineers    and    Contractors 
278-708  Majestic  Building,  Milwaukee,  Wis. 


American  Steel  Window  Company,  Sub-Contractors,  Thompson  Gymnasium 
EXECUTIVE  OFFICES:     CHICAGO  HEIGHTS,  ILLINOIS 


365 


Cunningham 

Class  Photographer 


To  Phillips  Exeter  Academy 


Studio,   Water  Street,  Exeter,  New  Hampshire 


"WFW 


366 


ENGRAVINGS    FOR  THIS   BOOK 
BY 

Buffalo 


367 


The  Phillips  Exeter  Academy 


Incorporated  April  3,   1781 
Formally  Opened  May   1,    1783 


'  I  AHE  ACADEMY  offers  instruction  in  all  the  studies  required  for  admission 
to  the  leading  colleges  and  scientific  schools. 

For  Admission  to  the  Junior  Class,  an  examination  is  required  in  English,  History 
of  the  United  States,  and  Arithmetic.  Candidates  for  admission  to  other 
classes  must  satisfy  their  Instructors  of  their  fitness,  either  by  examination  or  by 
certificates  from  former  teachers. 

In  General,  students  go  every  year  from  Exeter  to  Harvard,  Yale,  Princeton,  Massa- 
chusetts Institute  of  Technology,  and  to  many  other  colleges,  universities,  and 
technical  schools. 

Diplomas  are  given  to  students  who  honorably  complete  the  course. 

The  Tuition  is  $80.00  for  the  first  term,  $70.00  for  the  second,  $50.00  for  the  third, 
$200.00  a  year.  About  twelve  thousand  dollars  is  divided  annually  among  good 
scholars  of  high  character,  but  slender  means. 

Examinations  of  the  College  Entrance  Examination  Board  are  held  annually  in 
June  at  the  Academy. 

Besides  the  Libraries  of  the  Golden  Branch  and  the  G.  L.  Soule  Literary  Societies, 
there  is  a  Reference  Library,  containing  about  14,000  volumes. 

The  Physical  and  Chemical  Laboratories  are  thoroughly  equipped  and  are  unsur- 
passed even  by  some  college  laboratories. 

The  New  Gymnasium,  just  completed,  is  the  gift  of  William  Boyce  Thompson,  of 
the  class  of  1890.  It  contains  (300  lockers,  shower  baths,  and  a  swimming  pool, 
besides  bowling  alleys  and  a  baseball  cage.  Systematic  class  exercises,  and 
exercises  for  individuals,  adapted  to  their  special  needs  under  the  supervision  of  a 
skilled  director,  form  a  part  of  the  regular  course  of  Academic  training. 

Recent  Additions  include  Dunbar  Hall  (a  dormitory  for  the  younger  boys),  Merrill 
Hall  (administrative  offices,  rooms  for  the  literary  societies,  and  social  room), 
Hoyt  Hall,  Alumni  Hall  (a  dining  hall),  Gilman  House,  Williams  House,  Veazey 
House,  Porter  House,  Hooper  House,  Webster  Hall  (new  dormitories),  the  Davis 
Library,  Graduates  House  (an  inn  for  alumni  and  visitors),  The  New  Academy 
Building  (built  in  1914). 


368 


Index 


Alpha  Nu 

Assembly  Club 

Athletic  Association 

Athletics 

Baseball      

Battalion 

Bay  State  Club 

Bowling 

Calendar 

Chapel  Choir 

Chapel  Speakers 

Cheer  Leaders 

Christian  Fraternity 

Church  and  Chapel  Monitors     . 

Church  Attendance 

Class  Ballot 

Class  Day  Officers 

Class  of  1893      

Clubs 

College  Preferences 

Contents  by  Books  ...... 

Crew 

Cum  Laude  Society      

Dartmouth  Club 

Debating 

Dedication      . 

Dramatics 

"E"  Men  in  School      

Empire  State  Club 

Exeter  History 

Exonian 

Faculty 

Faculty  of  1900 

Football 

Foreword 

Four-Year  Club 

Fraternities 

Glee  Club 

G.  L.  Soule     .    .    . 

Golden  Branch 

Golf 

Granite  State  Club 

Gym.  Team 

Harvard  Club 

History,  Exeter 

Hockey 

Honors,  Military 

Hyde,  Dr.  W.  D.,  In  Memoriam 

In  Memoriam 

June  Ball  Girl 


8,32 


181  June  Ball  Officers      220 

219  Junior  Class 123 

235  Kappa  Delta  Pi 176 

231  Kappa  Epsilon  Pi 175 

255  Literary 131 

223  Lower  Middle  Class 117 

199  Major  Sport  Captains      236 

273  Mandolin  Club      164 

34  Merrill  Lecture  Course 138 

162  Merrill  Prize  Speaking 138 

157  Military      221 

276  Monthly 146 

154  Musical       159 

156  New  Exeter 11 

156  New  Jersey  Club 203 

89  Occupations,  Future,  of  Seniors     ...  88 

92  Ohio  Club 211 

46  Orchestra 162 

185  Organizations 129 

87  Peal 277 

10  Pean 148 

261  P.  E.  A.  Police 276 

90  Penn  State  Club 207 

195  Phi  Epsilon  Sigma 170 

134  Phi  Theta  Psi 182 

7  Pine  Tree  State  Club 209 

165  Potter,  Stephen,  In  Memoriam  ....  33 

236  Princeton  Club 191 

201  Prize  Awards 139 

45  Publications 141 

142  Religious 153 

35  Rifle  Club 217 

44  School,  The 29 

237  School  Picture 127 

4  Senior  Biographies        49 

93  Senior  Class 47 

169  Senior  Council 91 

160  Service  Issues     ....  * 152 

136  Snapshots (See  Peal) 

132  Southern  Club 215 

271  Tech.  Club .  193 

205  Tennis 269 

275  Track 245 

187  Trustees      31 

45  Upper  Middle  Biographies 96 

265  Upper  Middle  Class      95 

9  Vaudeville      168 

32  Western  Club 213 

33  Williams  Club 197 

277  Yale  Club 189 


369 


Good  Bye,  Exeter 


But  before  we  say  good-bye,  we  must  thank  all  of  those  who  have  helped  make  this  book 
what  it  is.  We  feel  grateful  to  the  whole  school  for  the  whole-hearted  support  it  has  given  us. 
We  cannot  here  mention  all  who  have  helped,  but  we  take  pleasure  in  naming  a  few  who  have 
sacrificed  the  most  time  for  the  book. 

For  the  photographic  department:  Mr.  Tilton,  of  Exeter,  N.  H.;  E.  B.  Carruth,  P.  Adams,  R. 
D.  Hudson,  J.  G.  Curtis,  T.  E.  Fry,  A.  H.  Van  Buren,  S.  W.  Fordyce,  R.  W.  Berkeley,  J.  A.  Nick- 
erson,  S.  H.  Whedon,  H.  H.  Reed,  G.  C.  Grant,  G.  W.  Hess,  R.  M.D  eane,  R.  R.  Vernon,  E.  H. 
MacPherson,  C.  Lamont,  J.  N.  Knowles,  W.  H.  Robertson,  Dr.  Leacock,  Mr.  Cushwa,  Mr.  Benton. 

For  the  art  department:  R.  W.  Fowler,  ex-' 19,  without  whose  unselfish  interest  and  work  we 
should  have  been  at  a  great  loss.  Also,  H.  D.  Lamson,  '17,  G.  W.  Sisson,  D.  N.  Officer,  W.  B. 
Franklin,  L.  B.  Grouard,  C.  E.  Thompson,  J.  G.  Butler,  R.  D.  Hudson  for  drawings  by  James, 
and  A.  O.  Levy,  of  Buffalo,  N.  Y..  for  valuable  suggestions. 

For  the  business  department:  W.  E.  Vieth,  E.  G  Bagley,  A.  L.  Hurst,  J.  R.  H.  Pickering. 
H.  W.  Davis,  R.  P.  Crenshaw,  E.  C.  Clark,  K.  Marvin,  Professor  Tufts  and  Dr.  Gillespie. 

For  the  editorial  department:  Mr.  Cushwa,  Mr.  Spooner,  Mr.  Webber,  Mr.  Crosbie,  Mr. 
Benton,  Mr.  Robinson,  Mr.  Pearson,  Captain  Dion,  Mr.  Chadwick,  Mr.  Libby,  Mr.  Connors, 
Mr.  Carney  and  S.  H.  Whedon. 

Miscellaneous:  The  Exonian,  Ioka  Theatre,  Miss  Cilley,  Miss  O'Neill,  Miss  Hudson,  A.  A. 
Phinney,  Mr.  D.  D.  Martin,  of  Buffalo,  W.  F.  Goodcll,  C.  B.  Myers. 

To  Dr.  Arthur  Gordon  Leacock,  for  his  helpful  criticism  and  assistance  we  owe  our  sincerest 
thanks. 

To  our  heelers,  R.  S.  Elliot,  L.  L.  Hurd,  H.  F.  C.  Hanson,  N.  Fuller,  and  G.  B.  Townsend, 
and  also  to  our  secretary,  W.  S.  Howland,  and  art  editor,  D.  R.  Martin,  who  make  up  the  1919 
Board,  we  feel  especially  grateful  for  the  work  they  have  done,  and  we  wish  them  success  in  their 
task  next  year,  hoping  also  that  they  will  follow  us  only  in  trying  to  make  a  better  and  a  different 
book. 

We  wish  to  thank  the  Electric  City  Engraving  Company,  for  the  high  quality  of  their  work, 
and  their  representative,  Mr.  R.  C.  Bacon,  of  the  1912  Pean,  for  valuable  suggestions.  We  art1 
grateful  also  to  our  photographers,  the  Cunningham  Studio,  for  the  fine  prints  which  made  such 
plates  possible. 

Last  of  all,  but  first  in  our  minds,  is  the  work  of  our  printers,  the  News-Letter  PrcsSj  under  Mr. 
Tompleton.  To  his  organization  is  due  much  of  the  reputation  which  the  Exonian,  Monthly,  and 
Pean  hold.  The  changes  made  for  the  1918  Pean  have  vastly  increased  the  difficulties  in  its 
printing.  We  are  greatly  indebted  to  him  and  his  entire  staff  for  the  whole-hearted  assistance 
they  have  given  us  and  the  finished  quality  of  their  product. 


370 


Joan  of  Arc  Saved  France 


Printed  from  plate  made  especially  for  the  Peal.     Hand  colored  by  the  Frank  W.  Swallow  Post  Card  Co.,  Ir.